A PLACE APART: THE HARM OF SOLITARY CONFINEMENT
by
Alexandra Campbell
A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements
for the degree of Master of Laws (LLM)
Graduate Department of the Faculty of Law University of Toronto
© Copyright by Alexandra P. Campbell, 2012
ii
ABSTRACT
A Place Apart: The Harm of Solitary Confinement Master of Laws (LLM) 2012 Alexandra Campbell CIHR Strategic Training Fellow in Health Law, Ethics and Policy Faculty of Law University of Toronto
This thesis examines the world of solitary confinement within the Canadian prison
system. My research was inspired by Ashley Smith, a 19-‐year old segregated
inmate who died from self-‐asphyxiation while seven guards watched. This
outrageous occurrence prompted me to question the practice of solitary
confinement and a prison system in which such an event could occur. Studying the
history of solitary confinement left me surprised to learn that it was originally
intended as a therapeutic and merciful alterative to the punishments of the day.
This revelation was one of a series of inversions that led me to conclude that solitary
confinement is a world apart, not just physically, but also socially, temporally and
legally. I have concluded that improving the lives of those segregated within our
prisons requires the world of solitary confinement to become anchored within the
broader legal and social context.
iii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT It is with gratitude that I acknowledge the assistance of my faculty supervisor, Professor Trudo Lemmens, as well as my SJD advisor, Blake Chapman. Alexandra Campbell
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS WITH ASHLEY SMITH..........................................1 CHAPTER TWO ADMINISTRATIVE AND PUNITIVE SEGREGATION: A DISTINCTION WITHOUT A DIFFERENCE?.................................................................................................................. 26 CHAPTER THREE FROM PENITENCE TO PUNISHMENT: AN HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF SOLITARY CONFINEMENT.............................................................................................. 51 CHAPTER FOUR A PLACE APART................................................................................................................. 79 CHAPTER FIVE IN SEARCH OF A BETTER SYSTEM.............................................................................107 WORKS CITED..................................................................................................................130
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CHAPTER ONE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS WITH ASHLEY SMITH Winston Smith, the protagonist in George Orwell’s novel Nineteen Eighty-
Four,1 did not delude himself into believing that his dissidence would go
unpunished. The Thought Police were too sophisticated to allow that. Throughout
his illicit affair with his girlfriend Julia, Winston knew that he would be captured and
tortured at the Ministry of Love. Once there, he would be asked to confess to things
that he had done and things that he had not done. He would confess to it all and,
ultimately, he would be killed. This outcome was inevitable. Everyone confessed to
both real and to imaginary crimes. Every enemy of the Party was exterminated.
Despite an awareness of their fate, Winston and Julia were comforted by a
belief in their ability to retain control over one thing: “the few cubic centimeters
within [their] skull[s].”2 They could be made to say that 2 + 2 = 5 but they could not
be made to believe that this was true. Regardless of the torture they would be forced
to endure, the things they would be made to say and the people they were bound to
betray in the process, Winston and Julia would continue to love each other and to
hate the Party, the enemy of their love and all other compassionate feelings. To die
hating the Party and loving each other would be a triumph of the human spirit.
Winston Smith died loving no one other than Big Brother and believing that 2
+ 2 = 5. During his period of torture, he betrayed Julia, not only by his words, which
1 George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four (London: Penguin Books, 2008). 2 Ibid. at 29.
2
he always knew was inevitable, but fundamentally, wishing her a scapegoat for his
pain.
The tragedies of Nineteen Eighty-Four are many, but perhaps the greatest is
Winston and Julia’s realization that we cannot control the few cubic centimeters
inside our skulls. The mind is not inviolate, but rather can be broken down just as
the body can. Meeting again by chance after their period of confinement at the
Ministry of Love, Winston and Julia exchange only a few words:
‘Sometimes,’ she said, ‘they threaten you with something – something you can’t stand up to, can’t even think about. And then you say, ‘Don’t do it to me, do it to somebody else, do it to so-‐and-‐so.’ And perhaps you might pretend, afterwards, that it was only a trick and that you just said it to make them stop and didn’t really mean it. But that isn’t true. At the time when it happens you do mean it. You think there’s no other way of saving yourself, and you’re quite ready to save yourself that way. You want it to happen to the other person. You don’t give a damn what they suffer. All you care about is yourself.’ ‘All you care about is yourself,’ he echoed. ‘And after that, you don’t feel the same towards the other person any longer.’ ‘No,’ he said, ‘you don’t feel the same.’3
In researching solitary confinement within Canadian prisons and
penitentiaries, I encountered many critiques of the practice. One that gave me
particular pause was that of Dr. Stephen Fox, professor of Psychology at Iowa
University, who described the deleterious effects of prolonged solitude in terms that
do not usually appear within the legal arena. Solitary confinement, says Dr. Fox,
renders a person incapable of feeling love.4 Like Winston and Julia, inmates who
spend extended time within an isolation cell suffer a permanent injury that is not
visible to the naked eye: they are unable to resume their previous loving 3 Ibid. at 305-‐306. 4 McCann v. Canada, [1976] 1 F.C. 570 (F.C.T.D.), at paras. 62-‐64 [McCann v. Canada].
3
relationships or to start new ones. While leaving the body merely singed, the
torture of prolonged isolation scorches some capacity within the mind or soul to
empathize with fellow human beings.
What do we do with people who are too difficult to manage, even within the
highly controlled prison community? People who avoid their problems are
sometimes told to stop burying their head in the sand. Problems will not go away
simply because you are not looking at them. Rather, whatever it is that is plaguing
you will wait at the sand’s surface for your head to emerge. Even with that
knowledge, the temptation to put off until later a problem you do not want to
confront can be too tempting to resist. Within a correctional facility, placing the
most difficult to manage inmates in solitary confinement is an act of burying our
collective head in the sand. To push the metaphor further, confining inmates within
segregation is an example of burying our problem in the sand while knowing all the
while that, no matter how many layers we place on top, the issue will resurface.
As a society, we “deal” with our most antisocial citizens by sending them
away to the holding centres that we call prisons. Prisons, of course, are
communities of their own, possessing their own cast of characters and their own
outliers who either refuse or are unable to respect the institutional order of things.
Again, the most difficult to manage are sent away, this time to the prison within a
prison: solitary confinement. There, inmates sit doubly isolated, first from the
community at large and next from the general population of the prison. The
problem that these individuals present to both worlds (inside and outside the
4
prison walls) is snuffed out through brute extraction, but not from its root. Rather,
the root of problem festers as the inmate is deprived of a social context in which to
learn and to heal. And eventually, when the isolated inmate’s prison term expires,
our head is yanked from the sand and we are forced to confront the creature,
inevitably more anti-‐social, that we have created. In short, one does not need to be a
prisoners’ rights activist to care about the treatment of prisoners in isolation.5 We
all have a vested interest in critically assessing the band-‐aid “solution” that is
solitary confinement.
Recently, the practice of solitary confinement has garnered considerable
attention from the Canadian media; the 2007 death of young inmate Ashley Smith
has raised questions about the propriety of holding prisoners in conditions of
isolation, even spawning a greatly anticipated inquest.6 The truth is that the
practice of solitary confinement has been criticized heavily since shortly after its
inception, yet it continues to be a primary tool in the administrative and punitive
toolkits of the Canadian correctional officer. Canadian prisoners have been held in
solitary confinement since the mid-‐nineteenth century. Correctional officers will 5 University of British Columbia’s law professor Michael Jackson describes in Justice Behind the Walls a talk given at the law school by penitentiary inmate named Gary Allen. Allen commented on the anger that built up within himself while in jail, stating that “when he felt his anger rising, it was as if an electrical energy pulsed through his veins, and there were times when that force was so great it seemed the electricity flowing out of his hands and feet would have the power to electrocute anyone standing close to him.” (Justice Behind the Walls (Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 2002), at 141.) Bill Frederick, another inmate who was interviewed by Jackson, claimed that his greatest fear was that his time in segregation would turn him into the callous killer that people believed him to be (Ibid. at 308). 6 Kirk Makin, “Series of calamities besets coroner’s inquest into Ashley Smith’s death,” The Globe and Mail (29 February 2012), online: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/series-‐of-‐calamities-‐besets-‐coroners-‐inquest-‐into-‐ashley-‐smiths-‐death/article550419/.
5
tell you that they are often left with no other choice when dealing with incorrigible
inmates such as Ashley Smith. Ashley’s death within her solitary confinement cell at
the age of 19 has left many convinced that there simply must be a better option. I
dedicate this thesis to the quest to understand how such an atrocious event could
have taken place within the Canadian prison system and to find alternatives to or
modifications of the practice of solitary confinement.
Ashley Smith’s Story7 On October 19, 2007, Ashley Smith asphyxiated and died in her solitary
confinement cell as a result of a ligature that she had tied around her neck. Seven
guards watched as her face turned purple and the period between her breaths grew
longer. By the time they intervened, it was too late to save Ashley’s life.
When she died, Ashley Smith had been incarcerated for four years, having
commenced a youth sentence for throwing crab apples at a postal worker at the age
of 15. Her index offence seemed innocuous enough. No one would have expected
Ashley’s sentence to balloon the way it did as a result of the litany of additional
convictions registered against her during her time in custody. Once incarcerated,
however, Ashley’s assaults on prison staff, verbal and physical, as well as her
destruction of institutional property, were never-‐ending. The words “oppositional”
and “defiant” seem understated when applied to her. During the course of Ashley’s
7 The details in the following four paragraphs are based on two documentaries by The Fifth Estate: “Out of Control” The Fifth Estate (8 January 2010), online cbc.ca http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/discussion/2010/01/out_of_control.html and “Behind the Wall” The Fifth Estate (12 November 2010), online cbc.ca http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/2010-‐2011/behindthewall/.
6
time as a federal inmate, she gained a reputation for being the most difficult to
manage female prisoner within the correctional system, quite a noteworthy
distinction considering both her young age and peer group.
Toward the end of her life, Ashley’s penchant for harming herself increased
greatly. She had a habit of cutting herself and, as she did on the day of her death,
frequently restricted her airway using cloth ligatures that she fashioned from any
material that she was able to shred. Unable to cope with Ashley, prison staff kept
her in solitary confinement and passed her from institution to institution. Her
presence at any correctional facility tended to monopolize its staff and it seems that
Ashley was rotated, at least in part, in order to prevent any one penitentiary from
having to bear the brunt of Ashley’s presence. It seems, as well, that Ashley was
moved in order to circumvent the rules surrounding the maximum period of time
that any inmate can spend in solitary confinement without a regional review. By the
time of her death, Ashley had spent years in isolation.
Ashley Smith was a notable inmate for several reasons. Her young age and
her tragic death are two. Notable as well was her steadfast refusal to be ignored.
Despite their efforts to efface her through continual isolation, Ashley’s rebellious
behaviour demanded attention from the correctional officers around her. Her need
for attention was so acute that many believe that it cost Ashley her life.
While Ashley struggled to get attention in her last years, she has received
considerable attention since the time of her death; Hana Gartner of the Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation’s The Fifth Estate hosted two documentaries dedicated to
7
Ashley Smith’s case: “Out of Control” and “Behind the Wall”.8 In the latter, Gartner
commented: “When you are looking for answers, getting into prison is as hard as
breaking out.” She described the resistance that she faced when trying to examine
the inner life of Canadian penitentiaries.
There is no question that the Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) is the least
visible branch of the criminal justice system.9 Unlike the police and the various
actors within the judicial branch of the criminal justice system, members of the CSC
are not accustomed to having their performance evaluated on a regular basis. The
online comments section related to the documentary “Behind the Wall” reflects a
tension between viewers horrified that the tragedy of Ashley Smith’s death could
happen within a Canadian prison and members of the CSC who assert that those of
us outside the prison system are unable to understand the challenges of their work
and, as such, cannot pass judgment. Two remarks representative of this tension are
reproduced from The Fifth Estate website.10 The emphasis has been added and a
passage from the first comment has been excerpted. Otherwise, the comments are
reproduced as they appear on the website:
[Anna:]
… the additions of baby cams in the wards of women would stop a lot of the abuse, especially if the public was invited to review/scrutinize the tapes or footage every week or so..Such oversight would be appropriate. I would like to see John Walsh or
8 Ibid. 9 Public Works and Government Services Canada, Commission of Inquiry into certain events at the Prison for Women in Kingston by the Honourable Louise Arbour (Ottawa: Canada Communication Group Publishing) at v [Arbour Report]. 10 “Behind the Wall”, supra note 7.
8
DR. Phil review this incident, in the court of public opinion..The ultimate responsiblity lies with the prison officials at the highest level and other senior levels of gov/t.. A shameful story that will no doubt be repeated if steps are not taken to modernize the prison system and move it into the 20th century...
[In response to “Anna”:]
Anna..have you ever been incarcerated? Have you ever worked as a guard in an institution? I have..I was a guard for 8 years. Its not rosy in there ..its JAIL. Try having feces thrown at you or being spit at by AIDS patients. Try having a young girl display the remnants of her montly period to you. Try being called every name in the book because you counted someone for head count. You people haven’t got a clue.
These two comments reflect a fundamental catch-‐22: those of us outside of
prison “haven’t got a clue” about how things should run within Canadian
penitentiaries because we are not inside, but we cannot get a clue because we
cannot get inside. We have only the words of those more intimately acquainted with
the world “inside” to help inform our opinion on the practices of Corrections
Canada.
Different stakeholders have made various comments on the untimely death
of Ashley Smith. A review of these different perspectives, the perspectives of
insiders, is instructive in gaining a glimpse into the cloistered world of Canadian
corrections and an appreciation of the factors that led to the tragic end of Ashley’s
life.
9
Report of the New Brunswick Ombudsman In June of 2008, the New Brunswick Ombudsman and Youth and Child
Advocate released a report11 about Ashley Smith’s time as an inmate within New
Brunswick detention centres, particularly the New Brunswick Youth Centre (NBYC)
where she spent approximately three years.12 The report makes recommendations
aimed at improving the care given to youth with serious mental health and
behavioural problems who become involved in the criminal justice system.
The NBYC is the only secure custody youth facility in the province of New
Brunswick. It can accommodate 100 adolescents at a time, both male and female,
and it houses youth from across the province. The NBYC is a modern institution,
opened in 1998, which follows a therapeutic model designed to encourage inmates
to work collaboratively as they improve their ability to work within a structure
while gaining respect for authority.13 According to the report, the NBYC:
[f]eatures amenities essential to the therapeutic community, including a gymnasium, library, wood working centre, art room, computer lab, horticulture station, and educational facilities. Medical services and nursing staff are also on site to attend to any medical needs of the youths.14
Confined within segregation for two-‐thirds of her sentence at the NBYC,
Ashley was unable to benefit from the therapeutic community and the various 11 New Brunswick, Ashley Smith: A Report of the New Brunswick Ombudsman and Youth Child Advocate on the services provided to a youth involved in the youth criminal justice system (Fredericton: Office of the Ombudsman & Child and Youth Advocate, 2008), online http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/2009-‐2010/out_of_control/links.html [Report of the New Brunswick Ombudsman]. 12 Between April 2003 and October 2006, Ashley Smith was a resident at the New Brunswick Youth Centre in either a part-‐time or a full-‐time capacity. 13 Report of the New Brunswick Ombudsman, supra note 11 at 13-‐14. 14 Ibid. at 12.
10
related facilities.15 Barely a day went by in which Ashley did not get herself in some
kind of trouble, resulting frequently in her placement in, or her continued detention
within, segregation, or “therapeutic quiet” as it is often called. Over her three years
at NBYC, Ashley accumulated over 800 documented “incidents” as a result of her
volatile behaviour and her attempts to harm herself.16 In fact, she amassed over 150
incident reports relating to her efforts at self-‐harm.17 On one occasion, Ashley
reported to staff that her fear of amassing more charges, and thereby extending her
sentence, made her want to end her life. Staff responded by placing her in solitary
confinement.18
Ashley was a large girl who weighed approximately 250 pounds and was
therefore, at times, difficult to physically subdue. Backup staff members called in
frequently to respond to incidents involving Ashley resulted in a drain on
institutional resources.19 On one occasion in June of 2004, Ashley’s behaviour was
controlled by placing her in a type of restraint called the “WRAP” for a period of fifty
minutes. In the “WRAP”, Ashley’s entire body was bound and a hockey helmet was
placed on her head so that she was unable to move in any way.20 In March of 2005,
15 Ibid. at 41. 16 Ibid. at 18-‐19. 17 Ibid. at 21. 18 Ibid. at 20-‐21. 19 Ibid. at 23. 20 Ibid. at 22.
11
pepper spray was used upon Ashley when she refused to leave the shower area and
staff were concerned that she might have been in possession of a razor blade.21
While the Ombudsman’s report expressed sympathy for the difficult position
faced by the correctional officers responsible for Ashley’s supervision, the
Ombudsman criticized the extensive use of solitary confinement and physical
restraints as a means to “correct” Ashley’s behaviour. It was clear that the threat of
solitary confinement went no distance to deter Ashley from attempting self-‐harm or
from further violations of law or institutional rules, yet it remained the most
commonly employed response when Ashley was charged with an institutional
infraction.22 The inefficacy of solitary confinement as an agent of behavioural
modification in Ashley’s case was evident most particularly in her demand, on one
occasion, to be removed from the general population and returned to solitary
confinement.23 Still, guards chose to control Ashley by restricting her freedom of
movement, either placing her within a solitary confinement cell for twenty-‐three
hours a day, or by rendering her movement entirely impossible through the
imposition of restraining devices such as the “WRAP”. The Ombudsman’s report
condemned Ashley’s extensive placement in solitary confinement in no uncertain
terms:
‘Living’ is [sic] segregation as Ashley did essentially meant that she was on a modified program and as a result, was excluded from regular programming. Her opportunities to participate in productive activities for
21 Ibid. at 23. 22 Ibid. at 20. 23 Ibid. at 28.
12
herself or to be with her peers were limited. She lived in extreme idleness for countless number of hours and was only allowed personal items when her behaviour was deemed appropriate to have them. I found it distressing to think that for approximately two thirds of her sentence, this teenager was alone in a cell most of the time, with very little loving physical contact (the only constant physical contact she had with others was mainly when she was restrained, sometimes forcefully). There is in fact evidence in what we have shown in this report that Ashley’s mental health state was deteriorating as the months went by. I challenge anyone with a sane mind to live in conditions similar to the ones described above, for half the time Ashley had to endure, and to come out having maintained a perfect mental equilibrium.24 [Emphasis added]
The Ombudsman’s report emphasized the significance of Ashley’s transfer to
an adult facility at the age of eighteen pursuant to an application by the
Superintendent of the NBYC.25 This transfer took place on October 5, 2006, despite
the efforts of Ashley’s counsel to delay the transfer until she turned twenty, the age
at which the transfer would have happened as a matter of course.26 In a diary entry
written a month before she was moved to an adult facility, Ashley expressed her fear
of this transfer and her profound suicidal thoughts:
Mom, If I die then I will never have to worry about upsetting my Mom again. It would have been nice today to stick my head in the lawn mower blade. F***, I really did have to hold back the urge. Maybe next time I will give it a try. Most people are scared to die. It can’t be any worse then living a life like mine. Being dead I think would just suit me fine. I wonder when the best time to do it would be. I’m not going to get locked because then I’m back on checks and they will expect me to act up then. I will call my Mom before bed and have one more chat. Somehow I have to let her know that none of this is her fault. I don’t know why I’m like I am but I know she didn’t do it to me. People say there is nothing wrong with me. Honestly I think they need to f*** off because they don’t know what goes on in my head. When I use to try to hang myself I was just messing around trying to make them care and pay attention. Now it’s different. I want them to f*** off and leave me alone. It’s no longer a joke. It kind of scares to
24 Ibid. at 41-‐42. 25 Ibid. at 24. 26 Ibid. at 25.
13
think that they might catch me before it’s done and then I will be a vegetable for the rest if my life. That’s why the most important thing right now is to stay unlocked so they don’t think anything is up. It’s over. … I went to court yesterday and I thought he was going to send me to adult! Time is running out. My chances are getting fewer and fewer. F***. I give up! I’m done trying.27
At the transfer hearing, the Superintendent argued that Ashley’s negative
influence over the other youth militated in favour of moving her to an adult
facility.28 The court hearing the application seemed persuaded that Ashley would be
better served by the programs that would be available to her at an adult facility,
failing to take into consideration that Ashley would have to demonstrate
“appropriate behaviour” before she would be entitled to participate in such
programming. As suggested by her time in youth custody, Ashley did not satisfy this
prerequisite.29 Transferred to an adult jail on October 5, 2006, Ashley died after just
over one year in adult facilities.30
27 Excerpt from the journal of Ashley Smith (4 September 2006), cited in Report of the New Brunswick Ombudsman, supra note 11 at 23-‐24. 28 The report points out that it is difficult to understand how Ashley would have had the opportunity to exert such a negative influence on her peer group at the NBYC considering the extent to which she was kept in isolation. Report of the New Brunswick Ombudsman, supra note 11 at 26. 29 Report of the New Brunswick Ombudsman, supra note 11 at 27. 30 Ibid. at 24.
14
Report of the Correctional Investigator “A Preventable Death” is what the Correctional Investigator of Canada, Howard
Sapers, entitled his report on the death of Ashley Smith, released on June 20, 2008.31
As revealed by his choice of title, the Correctional Investigator found that Ashley’s
improper treatment while in adult federal custody contributed significantly to the
loss of her life. Toward the end of his report, Sapers made pointed comments with
respect to Ashley’s extended placement in solitary confinement:
I believe strongly that a thorough external review of Ms. Smith’s segregation status could very likely have generated viable alternatives to her continued and deleterious placement on such a highly restrictive form of confinement. There is reason to believe that Ms. Smith would be alive today if she had not remained on segregation status and if she had received appropriate care. An independent adjudicator – as recommended by Justice Arbour – would have been able to undertake a detailed review of Ms. Smith’s case and could have caused the Correctional Service to rigorously examine alternatives to simply placing Ms. Smith in increasingly restrictive conditions of confinement. At that point, if it had been determined that no immediate and/or appropriate alternatives to segregation were available for Ms. Smith, the independent adjudicator could have caused the Correctional Service to expeditiously develop or seek out more suitable, safe and humane options for this young woman.32 [Emphasis added]
Sapers was particularly critical of the Correctional Service of Canada for, in
his estimation, placing its own administrative needs ahead of Ashley’s human
needs.33 Her repeated transfers had little to do with helping Ashley but rather
seemed to serve as a response to institutional issues such as staff fatigue34 and,
31 Canada, A Preventable Death by Howard Sapers, Correctional Investigator of Canada (Canada: Office of the Correctional Investigator, 2008), online: http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/2009-‐2010/out_of_control/links.html. 32 Ibid. at para. 93. 33 Ibid. at para. 84. 34 Ibid. at para. 19.
15
potentially, to circumvent the mandatory 60-‐day regional review of her detention in
solitary confinement. By “lifting” Ashley’s segregation status whenever she was
moved and setting the clock to zero once she was placed in a new institution or even
when she returned to the same institution after a brief absence (e.g., when she was
brought to court to make a required appearance), the Correctional Service of Canada
made sure that Ashley’s time in segregation did not meet the requirements for a
regional review. Sapers described this practice as “totally unreasonable.”35 The
illegal evasion of regional review precluded the criticism from those outside the
facility where Ashley was being held and, thus, helped to maintain the illusion that
keeping Ashley in indefinite isolation was an acceptable way to deal with the
challenges that Ashley presented.36 The CSC was well aware that the NBYC had
described the prolonged use of solitary confinement as “detrimental to [Ashley’s]
overall well-‐being” yet they continued to employ this strategy in their struggle to
control her.37
In his report, Sapers opined that Ashley was in desperate need of therapeutic
consistency but that, regretfully, the only consistency that she experienced
throughout her custodial life was being held in administrative segregation.38
Despite her brief placement in CSC’s Regional Psychiatric Centre in Saskatoon, and
35 Ibid. at para. 43. 36 Ibid. 37 Ibid. at para. 39. 38 Ibid. at para. 37.
16
her contact with mental health practitioners at various institutions, there was no
long-‐term treatment plan for Ashley nor any continuity to her care in terms of
attending staff. Regular transfers between institutions made consistent care
impossible for Ashley while a general dearth of mental health services for federal
inmates meant that the mental health care that she did receive was restricted to
suicide assessments.39 The limited insight into Ashley’s psychological condition that
did exist was not effectively communicated to the frontline staff who interacted with
her most regularly and were responsible for her oversight; most significantly, it was
not relayed to the correctional staff who were supervising Ashley at the time of her
death that, only days before, she had been assessed being “highly suicidal.”40
With respect to Ashley’s unrelenting attempts at self-‐injury, Sabers referred
to a post-‐mortem psychological assessment of Ashley and notes that “… although
these behaviours were maladaptive and dangerous, they could be understood in
part as a means of drawing staff into her cell in order to alleviate the boredom,
loneliness and desperation she had been experiencing as a result of her constant
isolation.”41 In light of the tremendous persistence of Ashley’s self-‐injury, Sabers
characterized the “wait-‐and-‐see” approach to Ashley’s self-‐harming behaviour as
wrong-‐headed. According to the Correctional Investigator, staff should have
intervened to remove any potentially dangerous item from Ashley’s cell as soon as
they became aware of its existence. What in fact happened was that staff members
39 Ibid. at paras. 31, 88-‐90. 40 Ibid. at para. 32. 41 Ibid. at para. 62.
17
waited to enter Ashley’s cell until Ashley had secured ligatures around her neck, was
turning blue and was experiencing difficulty breathing.42 This intentional delaying
of a response represented a fundamental misunderstanding of the CSC’s duty to
provide for the safe and humane custody of inmates.43 In Sapers’ opinion, it also
reflected a failure on the part of the CSC to learn from the deaths of other inmates
who might have survived had frontline staff responded in a timely fashion.44
Response of the Union of Canadian Correctional Officers In October 2008, the Union of Canadian Correctional Officers released their
own report on the death of Ashley Smith entitled “A rush to judgment: A report on
the death in custody of Ashley Smith, an inmate at Grand Valley Institution for
Women”.45 Again, the title of this report speaks volumes about the content of this
more defensive perspective on the death of an inmate. Written with great candor,
the report makes clear the Union’s position that CSC management has made
scapegoats of the front-‐line workers who happened to be present at the time of
Ashley’s death and who were following explicit management protocol not to enter
Ashley’s cell as long as she continued to breathe. The Union issued this report to
42 Ibid. at paras. 70-‐71. 43 Ibid. at para. 73. 44 Ibid. at paras. 109-‐114. 45 Union of Canadian Correctional Officers, A rush to judgment: A report on the death in custody of Ashley Smith, an inmate at Grand Valley Institution for Women (2008), online: http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/2009-‐2010/out_of_control/links.html [A rush to judgment].
18
support the three correctional officers who were criminally charged46 in relation to
Ashley Smith’s death and the four others who were suspended without pay, as well
as to “shed light on the catastrophically dysfunctional culture at Grand Valley
Institution, a problem that pervades the federally sentenced women (FSW) sector of
Correctional Service Canada”.47
According to the Union’s report, federal correctional officers were Ashley’s
closest friends during her last year of life. Many correctional officers went to great
lengths to establish a positive relationship with Ashley despite the risk that they
incurred to their physical safety by so doing. Federal correctional officers who
worked with Ashley were provided no information about her time in youth custody
and were therefore left with only Ashley’s self-‐reported experiences to help explain
how she had become an oppositional inmate bent on self-‐destruction.48 Cutting a
ligature from around Ashley’s neck became a regular occurrence for her
correctional officers. When they did so, sometimes as often as seven times a day,
Ashley’s guards were frequently met with violence, including biting and spitting.49
On the eve of her death, Ashley informed one of her favourite guards that she knew
46 These charges were ultimately withdrawn by the Crown on the basis that there was no reasonable prospect of conviction: Melinda Dalton, “Charges dropped against jail-‐death guards” (8 December 2008), online: thespec.com http://www.thespec.com/print/article/115094. 47 A rush to judgment, supra note 45 at 5. 48 Ibid. at 7. 49 Ibid. at 8.
19
that the correctional officers would always intervene before she caused her own
death.50
Guards were in uncharted territory with this inmate, the local union at
Joliette describing Ashley as the most difficult inmate that they have encountered in
their institution’s then 10-‐year history.51 The Union’s report included the comment
of one correctional officer who was at a loss with how to deal with Ashley, knowing
at once that she was excruciatingly bored and in desperate need of stimulation, and
that she would be likely create some kind of security incident if she were released
from her solitary confinement cell.52 Making matters worse, federal correctional
officers at Grand Valley Institution (GVI), where Ashley died, did not feel that they
had the support of management but rather were doubtful that management was
concerned with protecting the interests of those working most closely with the
inmate population. They found management to be interested in little besides
leaving GVI, considered to be an undesirable post. Most managers were in “acting”
positions and few had a deep understanding of their roles. Operational rules were
often contradictory and in flux, creating a sense of tension amongst the staff who
could not predict how management would next criticize their various attempts to
control Ashley’s outbursts.53 At Nova Institution, another federal institution where
Ashley was held, many staff members took stress leaves due to their anxiety over
50 Ibid. at 34. 51 Ibid. at 23. 52 Ibid. at 10. 53 Ibid. at 12, 20.
20
the possibility of unanticipated disciplinary actions in relation to decisions they
made concerning Ashley.54 The Union’s report painted a picture of a staff that felt
poorly equipped to face the challenge of Ashley Smith and vulnerable to
unprincipled exercises of disciplinary power.
Amongst the general chaos of contradictory policies at GVI, management
made one instruction very clear: if Ashley was still breathing, staff were not to enter
her cell. The Union’s report makes plain that it is as a result of this mandate that
correctional officers were left standing outside of Ashley’s cell during her numerous
attempts at self-‐strangulation, forced to make the determination of whether she was
still breathing without any training to recognize the moment at which Ashley
required intervention in order to save her life. They were fearful of disciplinary
action if they intervened too soon. Staff had the impression that management’s
policy that no one enter Ashley’s cell if she was still breathing was designed to
reduce the number of documented incidents in which force was used against an
inmate, a number that had elevated following Ashley’s arrival at the institution. Not
entering Ashley’s cell while she continued to breathe was not a policy that was
designed to protect Ashley or to dissuade her from self-‐harm, but rather a strategy
put into place in order to protect GVI from the negative attention received when the
number of “use of force” incidents became too high.55
Toward the end of her life, correctional officers wondered why Ashley was
not being transferred to a psychiatric hospital in light of her deteriorating mental 54 Ibid. at 20. 55 Ibid. at 31.
21
health.56 According to the Union, it was these correctional officers who cared for
Ashley and cut countless ligatures from her neck under the threat of reprimand who
were being unfairly branded as the ones responsible for Ashley’s untimely death.
The report clearly stated that the Union considers the luring of staff members to the
scene of their arrest, under the guise of a meeting at the request of the Deputy
Warden, the final affront in a series of betrayals by senior management.57 The
conclusion of the Union’s report is terse:
It is clear that, in addition to Ashley Smith, there are many other victims in this story. The people who worked diligently to save her life, despite management impediments, are being made to bear the consequences of her death. The Union of Canadian Correctional Officers will never accept this rank injustice. The union will use every avenue it has to defend the correctional officers caught in a trap not of their making. We will continue to push for policies that deal the high-‐risk female offenders in a secure, humane manner that minimizes risk.58
Smith Family Statement of Claim Dated July 14, 2009, the Smith Family Statement of Claim59 alleged that
various actors within the federal correctional system committed negligence and
other civil wrongdoings in their treatment of Ashley. Specifically, Ashley’s mother
Coralee Smith (on her own behalf and as the litigation administrator for the estate of
Ashley Smith), Ashley’s father Herb Grober, and Ashley’s sister Dawna Ward allege
that, among other wrong-‐doings, the various defendants to their civil action:
56 Ibid. at 32. 57 Ibid. at 38. 58 Ibid. at 41. 59 Coralee Smith et al. v. Attorney General of Canada, Statement of Claim (July 14, 2009).
22
a) transferred Ashley between federal institutions in an unlawful fashion by
failing to respect the procedural rules surrounding involuntary transfers of inmates;
b) detained Ashley in administrative segregation in contravention of the rules surrounding the use of segregation and the conditions of segregation;
c) unlawfully ignored or summarily dismissed Ashley’s inmate grievances;
d) failed to report “use of force” incidents regarding Ashley, contrary to law and
policy, in an effort to evade regional review of their treatment of Ashley;
e) failed to provide Ashley with regional health care and the necessaries of life;
f) conspired to keep Ashley in administrative segregation by transferring her between institutions in an effort to evade regional review of her prolonged period in solitary confinement;
g) conspired to deprive Ashley of the necessaries of life by establishing a policy
that no correctional officer was to enter her cell as long as she was still breathing;
h) were negligent in their care of Ashley;
i) inflicted mental suffering and psychiatric damage upon Ashley and her
family;
j) abused their public office by flouting the law in a way they knew was likely to injure the plaintiffs. If they did not know that injury was likely to result, they were at least reckless that injury would occur;
k) falsely imprisoned Ashley in solitary confinement;
l) breached their fiduciary duty to Ashley as an inmate under their care.
The Smith family relied on the facts set out in the report of the New Brunswick
Ombudsman and the report of the Correctional Officer.60
60 Ibid. at para. 24.
23
On May 4, 2011, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported that the
Smith family had reached an 11-‐million dollar out-‐of-‐court settlement in their
lawsuit against the Correctional Service of Canada.61
The tragic death of Ashley Smith has brought public attention to the inside of
Canadian prisons, a side of life we can be quick to forget because it is outside of our
range of vision. As Michael Ignatieff writes in the preface of A Just Measure of Pain:
It is easy to take prisons for granted. For those who manage to stay out of trouble with the law, prisons and punishment occupy the marginal place in the social awareness reserved for facts of life.62 The walls of the prison were not always so impermeable, however, nor were
the lives of those inside so shadowy and mysterious. The succeeding chapters will
review the basic framework of the current use of solitary confinement in Canada, as
well as the advent of the practice of solitary confinement and the changes in penal
practice that have resulted in a thickening of carceral walls. In the pages and
chapters that follow, I will attempt to demonstrate that the segregation unit of a
penitentiary, where the state imposes its greatest penal authority, is also a juridical
space of tremendous lawlessness. Although several jurists and scholars have made
note of this reality, the invisibility of the solitary confinement cell allows it to slip
quickly from public consciousness in a way that makes gathering momentum for
61 Dave Seglins, “Ashley Smith family settles $11M suit: New Brunswick teen died in Ontario prison cell” (4 May 2011), online: CBCnews Canada http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2011/05/03/ashley-‐smith-‐family-‐settles-‐suit.html. 62 Michael Ignatieff, A Just Measure of Pain: The Penitentiary in the Industrial Revolution 1750-‐1850 (New York: Pantheon Books, 1978), at xi.
24
change quite difficult. However, away from the gaze of public scrutiny, tremendous
psychological harm is being inflicted upon a highly vulnerable population.
The case of Ashley Smith, a review of Canadian case law and legislation, and
the research into the psychological harm that is inflicted upon prisoners who are
confined to isolation demonstrate that the practice of solitary confinement (as
opposed to its original governing theory or legislative framework) is extra-‐legal.
The solitary confinement cell is a place apart. In order to prevent well-‐publicized
tragedies like the death of Ashley Smith and the quiet tragedies of inmates currently
suffering in solitude, the law must re-‐exert its dominion over the agents of
segregation and establish solitary confinement’s place within, rather than outside of,
the Canadian legal landscape.
In the following chapter, I will review the basic legislation governing
Corrections Canada, as well as central case law representing judicial consideration
of the practice of solitary confinement, in order to explore the legal framework that
exists. Particular attention will be paid to the distinction between punitive and
administrative segregation. Next will follow an historical review of the practice of
solitary confinement with an emphasis on the philosophical disconnect between the
genesis of solitary confinement and its current practice, as well as the movement of
punishment from the public square to the periphery of our communities. Chapter
Four will explore solitary confinement as a separate space, divorced from the rule of
law as well as the surrounding world. My final chapter is devoted to suggesting how
the law might be brought back into the prison and how the solitary confinement cell,
if indeed it must persist, may become part of the Canadian legal system, rather than
25
what it is now: a place outside of time, and space, and law. Throughout, I will
attempt to demonstrate that the tragic story of a young girl who choked herself to
death in solitary confinement while guards watched is endemic of a larger illness
within Canadian corrections, a topsy-‐turvy world that has become too remote to feel
the normative influence of the broader community.
26
CHAPTER TWO ADMINISTRATIVE AND PUNITIVE SEGREGATION: A DISTINCTION
WITHOUT A DIFFERENCE?
We shall crush you down to the point from which there is no coming back. Things will happen to you from which you could not recover, if you lived a thousand years. Never will you be capable of ordinary human feeling.
Everything will be dead inside you. Never again will you be capable of love, or friendship, or joy of living, or laughter, or curiosity, or courage, or integrity.
You will be hollow. We shall squeeze you empty, and then we shall fill you with ourselves.63
It must be remembered that loss of liberty upon incarceration is not absolute.
Canadian courts have recognized on numerous occasions that, despite their
incarceration, Canadian inmates retain residual liberties. In R. v. Miller (1985), 23
C.C.C. (3d) 97 (S.C.C.), the court noted:
Confinement in a special handling unit, or in administrative segregation as in Cardinal, is a form of detention that is distinct and separate from that imposed on the general inmate population. It involves a significant reduction in the residual liberty of the inmate. It is in fact a new detention of the inmate, purporting to rest on its own foundation of legal authority.64 [Emphasis added]
Other judgments have recognized the additional loss of liberty, and thus the
heightened punishment, associated with confinement in segregation as opposed to
detention within the general population of a prison. In R. v. Shubley, [1990] 1 S.C.R.
3, the court addressed whether criminal proceedings against an inmate who had
already been punished within the institution by placement in solitary confinement
63 Orwell, supra note 1 at 268. 64 R. v. Miller (1985), 23 C.C.C. (3d) 97 (S.C.C.), at para. 35 [Miller cited to C.C.C.].
27
violated the principle against double jeopardy enshrined in s. 11(h) of the Charter of
Rights and Freedoms. Though the majority of the court found that it did not, Wilson
and Cory JJ. dissented in result, finding that confinement in segregation is a
punishment fundamentally different in kind from incarceration in the general
population, and that the imposition of additional penal consequences after an
inmate had spent time in solitary confinement would amount to being punished
twice for the same offence:
Prisons within prisons have been known to man as long as prisons have existed. As soon as castles had dungeons there were special locations within those dungeons for torture and for solitary confinement. The grievous effects of solitary confinement have been almost instinctively appreciated since imprisonment was devised as a means of punishment. Prisons within prisons exist today, exemplified by solitary confinement. The complete isolation of an inmate from others is quite different from confinement to a penal institution where some form of contact with people both inside and outside is the norm. Close or solitary confinement is a severe form of punishment. The vast majority of the human race is gregarious in nature. To be deprived of human companionship for a period of up to thirty days can and must have very serious consequences. Literature of yesteryear and today is replete with the deterrent effects of such punishment. Solitary confinement certainly cannot be considered as a reward for good conduct. It is, in effect, an additional violation of whatever residual liberties an inmate may retain in the prison context and should only be used where it is justified. To say otherwise would mean that once convicted an inmate has forfeited all rights and could no longer question the validity of any supplementary form of punishment.65 [Emphasis added]
In Winters v. British Columbia (Legal Services Society) (1999), 137 C.C.C. (3d) 371
(S.C.C.), Cory J., again writing in dissent, found it a matter of settled law that
65 R. v. Shubley, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 3, at paras. 6-‐8 [Shubley cited to S.C.R.].
28
“incarcerated persons continue to possess a residual liberty interest that can be
implicated by institutional action.”66
In order to understand the residual liberties possessed by inmates, and the
impact of solitary confinement upon those residual liberties, a closer look at the
legislation governing Corrections Canada is required.
Guiding Principles of the CCRA
Section 3 of the Corrections and Conditional Release Act (CCRA)67 sets out the
purpose of the federal correctional system of Canada. It states as its goal:
… contribut[ing] to the maintenance of a just, peaceful and safe society by
(a) carrying out sentences imposed by courts through the safe and humane custody and supervision of offenders; and (b) assisting the rehabilitation of offenders and their reintegration into the community as law-‐abiding citizens through the provision of provisions in penitentiaries and in the community.
According to s. 4 of the CCRA, the principles guiding the Correctional
Service of Canada in fulfilling the goal expressed in s. 3 include:
• carrying out sentences in accordance with the “stated reasons and recommendations of the sentencing judge” (subsection b);
• promoting “openness” through “a timely exchange of information” with other members of the criminal justice system, and communication with offenders, victims and the public (subsection c);
66 Winters v. British Columbia (Legal Services Society) (1999), 137 C.C.C. (3d) 371 (S.C.C.), at para. 63 [Winters v. BC cited to C.C.C.]. 67 Corrections and Conditional Release Act, S.C. 1992, c. 20 [CCRA].
29
• restraint in imposing restrictions on inmates, “us[ing] the least restrictive measures consistent with the protection of the public, staff members and offenders” (subsection d);
• respecting the residual rights of inmates who “retain the rights and
privileges of all members of society, except those rights and privileges that are necessarily removed or restricted as a consequence of the sentence” (subsection e).
The existence of the Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) is statutorily mandated by
s. 5 of the CCRA. This section expresses the responsibilities of the CSC as:
(a) the care and custody of inmates; (b) the provision of programs that contribute to the rehabilitation of offenders and to their successful reintegration into the community; (c) the preparation of inmates for release; (d) parole, statutory release supervision and long-‐term supervision of offenders; and (e) maintaining a program of public education about the operations of the Service.
Segregation and the CCRA Administrative segregation Administrative and punitive segregation are distinguished within the CCRA.
Pursuant to s. 31(1), the purpose of administrative segregation is defined as
“keep[ing] an inmate from associating with the general inmate population”. If the
institutional head believes that there is no “reasonable alternative”, an inmate may
be placed in administrative segregation for three main reasons, as outlined by s.
31(3) (paraphrased here):
30
(a) protecting “the security of the penitentiary or the safety of any person”;
(b) preventing an inmate from interfering with a criminal investigation or an investigation of a serious disciplinary offence;
(c) protection of the inmate’s own safety.
The first of these three justifications, s. 31(1)(a), is very broad and can be invoked
based on ways that the inmate has acted, ways that the inmate has “attempted” to
act, or things that the inmate “intends” to do.68
Once placed in administrative segregation, an inmate retains his entitlement
to the “same rights, privileges and conditions of confinement as the general inmate
population” except for those that can only be enjoyed by virtue of association with
other inmates, or those that cannot be provided to the segregated inmate for
security reasons or the limitations inherent to the administrative segregation area.69
The CCRA entitles administratively segregated inmates to reviews of their status,
though it does not specify review periods.70 Inmates are entitled to attend status
review hearings, unless their presence would be seriously disruptive or would
68 “Under very broad discretionary powers given to wardens, a prisoner may be placed in administrative segregation, there to be confined in a cell indefinitely for twenty-‐three hours a day without the necessity of either a formal disciplinary charge or a conviction in disciplinary court. Because the time spent in administrative segregation can extend to months, even years, it represents the most powerful form of carceral authority; historically, it has also been the most abused.” Michael Jackson, Justice Behind the Walls: Human Rights in Canadian Prisons (Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 2002), at 9-‐10. 69 CCRA, supra note 67 at s. 37. 70 Ibid. at s. 33(1).
31
jeopardize the safety of any person present.71 Administratively segregated inmates
are entitled to daily visitation by a registered health care professional72 and can
request a meeting with the institutional head who is required, by virtue of s. 36(2)
of the CCRA, to visit the administrative segregation area of the institution at least
once every day. Pursuant to s. 31(2), the CSC must endeavour to return an inmate in
administrative segregation to the general inmate population, either of that
institution or another institution, “at the earliest appropriate time.”
Punitive segregation
Punitive segregation, as opposed to administrative segregation, is addressed
in the section of the CCRA entitled “Discipline”. An inmate who is found guilty of
committing one of the many disciplinary offence enumerated in s. 40 (including
disobeying a justifiable order (s. 40(a)); willfully or recklessly destroying property
(s. 40(c)); being “disrespectful or abusive” toward a staff member in a manner that
could undermine the staff member’s authority (s. 40(f)); being “disrespectful or
abusive” toward anyone in a manner that could incite that person to violence (s.
40(g)), and many more) is subject to a disciplinary measure. Such disciplinary
measure can be a warning, a loss of privileges, a fine, an order to perform extra
duties, or, in the case of a “serious disciplinary offence”, segregation from other
inmates for a period of no more than 30 days.73 Whether or not an institutional
71 Ibid. at s. 33(2). 72 Ibid. at s. 36(1). 73 Ibid. at s. 44(1).
32
offence constitutes a “serious disciplinary offence” as opposed to a garden-‐variety
disciplinary offence is a matter to be determined by the institutional head based on
the seriousness of the conduct alleged and the various aggravating and mitigating
factors at play.74
For a finding of guilt to be registered, the person conducting the hearing
must be satisfied that the offence has been made out beyond a reasonable doubt.75
The procedure for the hearing is not laid out within the CCRA, but, as with the
administrative segregation status hearings, the inmate as the right to be present
unless his presence would be seriously disruptive or there are reasonable grounds
to believe that the inmate’s presence would jeopardize the safety of anyone
present.76
Segregation and the CCRR
The Corrections and Conditional Release Regulations (CCRR)77 fills in some of
the important gaps left by the CCRA. Pursuant to s. 3(a) of the CCRR, every
corrections staff member is obliged to be familiar with the CCRA, the CCRR and
every policy directive that relates to his or her duties. It is the CCRR, as opposed to
the CCRA, that outlines the entitlement of administratively segregated inmates with
respect to the review of their status. Section 21 of the CCRR establishes the review
74 Ibid. at s. 41(2). 75 Ibid. at s. 43(3). 76 Ibid. at s. 43. 77 Corrections and Conditional Release Regulations, SOR/92-‐620.
33
periods of the “Segregation Review Board”, the internal administrative body
designated by the institutional head of the institution. In the case of administrative
segregation that is involuntary, i.e., when the inmate has not requested to be
segregated, the inmate is entitled to a hearing before the Segregation Review Board
within five working days.78 Thereafter, he is entitled to a review at least every thirty
days.79 If the administratively segregated inmate remains so segregated for sixty
days, the inmate is entitled to a review of his status by a staff member of the
regional headquarters at that point, and every sixty days thereafter.80 It is only at
the sixty-‐day mark that anyone outside of the institution where the inmate is
housed is bound to consider his segregated status. Even then, it is someone who
works within the Correctional Service of Canada conducts the review.
The insular nature of the review process with respect to involuntary
administrative segregation must be contrasted with the procedural safeguards that
come into play when an inmate is charged with a serious disciplinary offence. When
an inmate is charged with a serious disciplinary offence, the adjudicative hearing is
presided over not by an internal board but by one of the region’s independent
chairperson appointed by the Minister of Public Safety.81
78 Ibid. at s. 21(2)(a). 79 Ibid. at s. 21(2)(b). 80 Ibid. at s. 22. This is the review that Ashley Smith was denied by virtue of the constant resetting of the clock measuring the time she had spent in solitary confinement. 81 Ibid. at ss. 24(1) and 27(2).
34
Why are those charged with serious disciplinary offences entitled to special
protections under the CCRR? The heightened safeguards and special procedure that
apply in the case of serious disciplinary offences, as opposed to minor disciplinary
offences, seems to reflect an implicit acknowledgement of the particularly punitive
nature of time spent in isolation. As reviewed previously, it is only when an inmate
is found guilty of a serious disciplinary offence can he be sentenced to a period of
segregation (minor disciplinary offences do not warrant such a severe
consequence), although not exceeding thirty days. If the inmate is sentenced to
multiple periods of segregation that are to be served consecutively, the total period
in segregation must not exceed forty-‐five days.82 The potential to be punished by
time spent in segregation is the only potential penalty distinguishing serious
disciplinary offences from minor disciplinary offences. Hearings with respect to
minor disciplinary offences are conducted before an institutional head or his staff
member designate, while an inmate charged with a serious disciplinary offence is
entitled to the objectivity of an independent chairperson, except in “extraordinary
circumstances.”83 Unlike those charged with minor disciplinary offences, an inmate
charged with a serious disciplinary offence must be given a “reasonable opportunity
to retain and instruct legal counsel for the hearing.”84
82 Ibid. at s. 40(2). 83 Ibid. at s. 27. 84 Ibid. at s. 31(2).
35
All this implicit acknowledgement of the severe punitive effect of time spent
in segregation seems undone, however, by an unassuming subsection of the CCRR.
Section 40(3) reads:
An inmate who is serving a period of segregation as a sanction for a disciplinary offence shall be accorded the same conditions of confinement as would be accorded to an inmate in administrative segregation. [Emphasis added]
With these words, Corrections Canada invokes a type of Orwellian doublethink.
Segregation is very bad indeed and those who face it as a penalty deserve extra
protections. At the same time, inmates who are placed in segregation for
administrative and not punitive reasons, i.e., through no fault of their own, receive
the same “conditions of confinement” as those who are sent there for punishment.85
Though, at first, this provision may seem to be merely a protection to those in
punitive segregation, the effect of this regulation is that punitive and administrative
segregation are made the same. In fact, administrative segregation is worse in that
those housed in administrative segregation are entitled only the most basic
procedural protections despite the fact that there is no time limit to their stay in
segregation. And yet, the governing legislation distinguishes punitive and
administrative segregation as if to suggest that punishment is not punishment if it is
imposed for administrative purposes. 2 + 2 = 5.
85 With respect to the administrative segregation of the female inmates in the Kingston Prison for Women, Louise Arbour noted: “The segregation was administrative in name only. In fact it was punitive, and it was a form of punishment that courts would be loathe to impose, so destructive are its consequences.” Arbour Report, supra note 9 at 144.
36
Administrative Segregation in Practice
Recently, the British Columbia Superior Court had an opportunity to consider
the intense punitive effect that administrative segregation can have. In Bacon v.
Surrey Pretrial Services Centre, 2010 BCSC 805, administratively segregated inmate
James Bacon brought a petition against the Warden of the detention centre where
he was being held (Surrey Pretrial Services Centre) for habeus corpus and certiorari
in aid. Bacon’s allegation was that he was being detained illegally and his wish was
to be released from solitary confinement where he had spent seven months as a
presumptively innocent man awaiting his trial. In June of 2010, the British
Columbia Supreme Court allowed Bacon’s petition after an extensive consideration
of the conditions in which Bacon had been forced to live. The Bacon decision is
significant as it reflects the last time a Canadian court has taken a cold, hard look at
the conditions of solitude in which Canadian prisoners are forced to live. Notably,
after a thorough and thoughtful judgment, the court found that it was unable to
comment on the constitutionality of the governing legislation because the
correctional staff had failed to honour the law to such a degree that there was no
record to assess the true effects of the legislation. The evidence revealed, however,
that Bacon’s s. 7 and s. 12 Charter rights had been violated; his security of the
person, both physically and psychologically, had been compromised and he had
been subjected to cruel and unusual punishment at the hands of Correctional
Service of British Columbia.86
86 Bacon v. Surrey Pretrial Services Centre, 2010 BCSC 805, at paras. 338, 355 [Bacon v. SPSC].
37
The judgment ends with a critique of the conduct of the Attorney General of
British Columbia that is exceptional in its severity. Justice McEwan chastised the
Crown for failing to acknowledge the unjustifiable nature of the respondent’s
behaviour and revealed a sense of mistrust that the Attorney General was living up
to its responsibilities as a proponent of the law:
There was certainly a point in the proceeding when it became clear that some of the respondent's conduct was indefensible. The Attorney General has not conceded this in any formal sense, and late in the day was still describing his position relative to the petitioner as "adversarial". This is a troubling development. While the courts are, among other things, arbiters of the rights and freedoms of the individual as against the state, they are not the sole protectors of those rights and freedoms. The Attorney General has, as a primary responsibility, the protection of the public interest. … The Attorney General is obliged to ensure that the government, including other Ministries, conforms to the laws the Legislature passes, and that the Constitutional rights of those entrusted to it, even those the public deems odious, are protected. Until it is clear that the Attorney General is taking the necessary steps to ensure that the petitioner's treatment at the hands of the responsible Ministry accords with proper legal and procedural norms, this Court will be obliged to supervise the conditions of his incarceration.87
A more fulsome overview of the case is required to understand what drove the court
to find that there was no basis to consider the constitutionality of the Correction
Act,88 and the accompanying regulations, and to feel the need to remind the
Attorney General of its dual role as both prosecutor and guardian of rights and
freedoms.
The petitioner, Bacon, was charged with a single count of first degree murder
and one count of conspiracy to commit murder in relation to a 2007 gang shooting
87 Ibid. at paras. 341-‐345. 88 Correction Act, SBC 2004.
38
that left six people dead. He was not released on bail89 and, at the time of his
petition, was in custody pending the resolution of his charges. In light of the
voluminous nature of disclosure, it was anticipated at the time of the habeus corpus
application that it could be a matter of years before the case was tried.90
By way of affidavit, the petitioner outlined the conditions of his confinement
in segregation which commenced when he was taken into custody. While the
circumstances of his confinement varied somewhat based on occasional relocations
within the facility, the petitioner’s account of his treatment in the remand centre
went largely unchallenged. Among other complaints, he drew attention to the
following conditions to which he was subjected:
a) 23 hours a day confinement in a small cell;
b) the hour spent outside of the cell changed constantly such that it was impossible to arrange with counsel a time to speak;
c) phone calls limited to those with his lawyer;
d) visits limited to those with his parents on a weekly basis;
e) no sound-‐proofing to allow for privileged conversations;
f) being forced to eat cold food within feet of the toilet in his cell;
g) having no control over the lighting in his constantly illuminated cell;
89 In fact, at the time of the hearing the petitioner had not attempted to show cause as to why he should be released pursuant to the reverse onus provisions of the Criminal Code pertaining to allegations of serious offences such as murder (see Bacon v. SPSC, supra note 86, at para. 4). There are legitimate reasons relating to credit for pretrial custody why a person in the petitioner’s position might not seek a bail hearing, particularly if he thought that his detention was inevitable. Additionally, a person in the petitioner’s position might want to delay a bail hearing until they have a release plan in place that they believe will satisfy the concerns of the court. 90 Bacon v. SPSC, supra note 86 at paras. 1-‐4.
39
h) being forced to shower in water that was either too hot or too cold to tolerate.
With respect to his psychological state, the petitioner expressed concern that his
mental health was deteriorating to the point that he would be unable to defend
himself at trial. Justice McEwan summarized the petitioner’s account of his
psychological deterioration as follows:
The petitioner said that he does not believe that he can maintain his sanity in the present conditions. He feels that the isolation of his confinement is destroying him. He said that the days all seem the same, that he feels powerless, and that there are some days when he has difficulty controlling feelings of rage. … The petitioner said he feels that his memory is deteriorating. He said he has problems focusing and loses control of his thoughts. He said he finds himself daydreaming and has difficulty concentrating. He said he has difficulty following through with any tasks such as letter writing. He said he can only write a few pages and then must put his writing away. He said he often finds on re-‐reading that the letters make no sense. He said that he sometimes finds himself laughing at nothing. … He said that he finds himself not wanting to go out of his cell at all. He said he is now uncomfortable around other people. He said he does not want to talk to guards. He said he starts to panic when he hears keys in his door. He said he does not even want to meet with counsel because he is forced to think about the situation he is in. He said this makes him angry and that it may take him hours to calm down afterwards. The petitioner said he fears that if these conditions persist, he will not be in any frame of mind to face his trial. … He believes that the respondent is part of a conscious effort to break him, in collaboration with the police.91 Bacon’s perception of his detention was not without good reason. In fact, the
court found that the correctional officers charged with the petitioner’s care had not
carried out their role as mandated by their governing statutory authority, but rather
had acted as an “extension of the police”;92 they took their directions from the
police, who wished to keep the petitioner as isolated as possible lest he compromise 91 Ibid. at paras. 101-‐105. 92 Ibid. at para. 270.
40
their investigation in any way through his communication with others.93
Significantly, the concern of the police was speculative and ungrounded in any
historical behaviour on the part of the petitioner. However, correctional officers
were content to comply with police preference, detaining the petitioner in
conditions of segregation on the basis of what he might do, rather than any
statutorily recognized basis for detention. In so doing, the detention centre created
an impossible situation for the petitioner as he was unable to modify his behaviour
in any way to satisfy his jailors of an unachievable standard, that is that there was
no possibility that he might communicate with others to the detriment of the police
investigation. The speculative “risk” of what the accused might do was
incontrovertible in its vagueness and hypothetical nature. As Justice McEwan
stated:
Because the respondent has inappropriately substituted a test of what the petitioner might do for the tests set out in the Regulation, and substituted police-‐driven media reports for evidence, the petitioner has been left in a position where he was unable to demonstrate adherence to any achievable standard in order to work his way out of the restrictions imposed upon him. Due process for the petitioner at the hands of the respondent has been characterized by perfunctory adherence to form, and a near-‐total disregard of substance.94
The court was troubled by the respondent’s lack of transparency,
commenting in particular on the respondent’s manipulative use of language in
defending the petitioner’s action. According to the respondent, the petitioner was
kept in “separate confinement” as opposed the “segregation”, a linguistic attempt to
93 Ibid. at para. 261. 94 Ibid. at para. 265.
41
distinguish solitary confinement, which was ostensibly imposed for the protection
of the inmate, from the punishment of segregation that is imposed in response to an
inmate’s misconduct. In reality, however, there is no difference in the conditions
experienced by the inmates in separate confinement and segregation.95 It turns out
that a thorn by any other name is still a thorn. The petitioner’s status in separate
confinement, rather than solitary confinement, served only to obscure what was
obvious upon a more probing examination: if those in punitive segregation are
being punished, then so are those separate confinement, though they have
committed not institutional wrong. Addressing the “doublespeak” employed by the
respondent, the court noted that:
the only practical effect of the distinction between "separate confinement" and "segregation" was that by applying the semantic fiction of "separate confinement" for "protective" purposes the deprivations could go on indefinitely.96
Furthermore, the court found the respondent’s reference to the Mission Statement
of the Adult Custody Division of the detention centre to be “dissociative” in these
circumstances. (The Mission statement expressed the preeminence of due process,
treating inmates with dignity and respect, and ensuring their safe and secure
custody.) The evidence of the operation of the pretrial detention centre, as
95 Ibid. at para. 269. 96 Ibid. at para. 259. This comment of the court in Bacon v. Surrey Pretrial Services Centre echoes the words of Professor Michael Jackson in Justice Behind the Walls (Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 2002), at p. 287:
Many elements of the tension between rhetoric and reality in the contemporary prison can be found in the regime of administrative segregation. True to the rhetoric of corrections, the very term “administrative segregation” provides apparently benign semantic camouflage for the most intensive form of imprisonment.
42
reviewed by the court, “suggest[ed] an institution operated in a manner at serious
odds with its purposes.”97
Though the petitioner himself reported having no concerns with respect to
his physical safety anywhere within the facility, the institution believed that the
notorious nature of his criminal charges meant that his safety would be at risk were
he housed in the general population. The respondent insisted that the petitioner
had to kept in separate confinement, at least in part, to maintain his own safety.
Rejecting this argument, the court held that the duty to keep an inmate “safe” has a
psychological as well as a physical dimension. The respondent’s perception of
keeping an inmate safe, however, was based on a misconception that being able to
“deliver a live body to the courts when required to do so” discharged the
obligation.98 The court rejected this interpretation of the obligation strongly,
finding that it could not be the case that the only way to ensure the physical security
of certain inmates was to maintain them in conditions that threatened their
psychological health or trammeled upon their residual liberty interests:99
When the judiciary delivers a person to the jailer with a direction to keep him "safe", the mandate obviously includes protecting health in mind and body. It means that his or her residual rights will be respected. While the content of such rights is not precisely defined, it certainly includes the "privileges" set out in s. 2 of the Correction Act Regulation. It also includes the right to a fair trial and to treatment that ensures that a fair trial is possible. This means that an inmate is not held so that the police can improve their case, or so that Corrections can, without the nuisance of judicial authorization, assist them. An inmate is a person with positive rights to
97Bacon v. SPSC, supra note 86 at para. 344. 98 Ibid. at para. 295. 99 Ibid. at para. 296.
43
counsel, to approach witnesses, and to prepare his case unimpeded by rules or practices having the effect of frustrating such access. It is truly shocking that a facility called a PreTrial Services Centre has no accommodation for reasonable communication with lawyers (i.e. privacy, desks, telephones, paper) during ordinary business hours. It is scandalous that the staff, willingly and unlawfully abet the police in their investigative objectives. It is difficult to imagine a less even-‐handed system than which the respondent currently administers.100 [Emphasis added]
Having found that the petitioner had been unjustly deprived of almost all of
his residual liberties and kept in “deplorable” conditions that have been
“condemned internationally,”101 it is unsurprising that the court found a violation of
his s. 7 Charter rights to life, liberty and security of the person and the imposition of
cruel and unusual punishment.102 Describing the need to issue this direction as
“remarkable”, the court ordered that the respondent to begin treating the petitioner
in accordance with the law:
… I direct that the respondent start by limiting her treatment of the petitioner strictly to the authority vested in her under the Correction Act and the Correction Act Regulation. I expect the petitioner, in his day to day dealings with the prison administration, to be dealt with in accordance with the Adult Custody Policy Manual, unless something better is implemented. I do not suggest it is a perfect or necessarily an adequate template for due process, but it is a starting point. As matters stand, it is not possible to meaningfully critique standards of practice and procedure honoured so much more in the breach than in the observance.103 With respect to a remedy, the court found that the petitioner was entitled to
careful consideration of whether it was possible to create spaces within the
100 Ibid. at para. 299. 101 Ibid. at para. 292. 102 Ibid. at paras. 319, 324. 103 Ibid. at para. 339.
44
institution that eliminated bona fide security concerns created by contact with some
of the general prison population without eliminating social contact or unfairly
restricting his residual liberties. The court held that limited resources could never
justify treatment of an inmate that does not live up to constitutional standards. If
resources do not allow for constitutionally sound treatment, resource allocation
must change.104 The judgment of the court made clear its belief that the respondent
had not applied a modicum of creativity or ingenuity in an effort to facilitate the
petitioner’s rights. Granting the petitioner special costs,105 the court ordered that
the petitioner’s visiting and telephone “privileges” be restored immediately and that
he be released into the general population if possible.106 If proper grounds existed
to detain the petitioner in separate confinement, the court ordered that the
respondent either place the petitioner in a setting with inmates who would not pose
a risk and to whom he would not pose a risk, and improve his conditions so that his
treatment is “comparable” to an inmate in the general population.107
Bacon v. Surrey Pretrial Services Centre suggests that not much has changed
since the significantly earlier decision of McCann v. Canada, [1976] 1 F.C. 570. In
McCann, eight inmates of the British Columbia Penitentiary who had been forced to
serve time in the solitary confinement unit (SCU) sought a declaration from the
Federal Court that their confinement pursuant to s. 2.30(1) of the Penitentiary
104 Ibid. at para. 336. 105 Ibid. at para. 356. 106 Ibid. at paras. 337, 351. 107 Ibid. at para. 351.
45
Service Regulations violated their right, under the Canadian Bill of Rights, to be free
from cruel and unusual punishment. The court made this declaration, but not
without subsequent controversy; the court in R. v. Bruce (1977), 36 C.C.C. (2d) 158
(B.C.S.C.), found that the court in McCann had applied an incorrect test for cruel and
unusual punishment or treatment.108
Although the court in McCann was willing to make a declaration of cruel and
unusual punishment, it was unwilling to declare that the practice of solitary
confinement itself was necessarily cruel and unusual. Rather, the court
optimistically surmised that “adequate alternatives” must exist to the way solitary
confinement was then practiced to remove its cruel and unusual effects.109 The
McCann hearing and judgment was significant, in part, as a result of the considerable
amount of social science evidence that was marshaled on behalf of the plaintiffs.
Justice Toy in R. v. Bruce, above, found that such evidence did not translate well into
the legal arena, and that terms and concepts appropriate to the psychological and
psychiatric milieu were overstated and exaggerated when applied to a legal
analysis.110 It is unsurprising that subsequent courts felt uncomfortable
acknowledging the harsh indictment of the way solitary confinement that had been
observed to take place within a Canadian jail.
At the McCann hearing, Dr. Richard Korn gave expert evidence with respect
to the conditions of the SCU in the B.C. Penitentiary. Dr. Korn held a Ph.D. in social
108 R. v. Bruce (1977), 36 C.C.C. (2d) 158 (B.C.S.C.), at para. 13 [Bruce, cited to C.C.C.]. 109 McCann v. Canada, supra note 4 at para. 91. 110 Bruce, supra note 108, at para. 13.
46
psychology and, at the time of his testimony, had conducted research in the field of
criminology and penology for 23 years.111 The court summarized the crux of Dr.
Korn’s opinion evidence in this way:
He expressed the view generally that the purpose of solitary confinement was to break a man down, to break his capacity to resist and to get him into a submissive state. He explained how the prison forms a separate society where the prisoner has his role, his job, his friends and these things are related to maintaining his sense of dignity and autonomy. When he is removed from that society for reasons he knows not and for a duration he knows not, "he passes into a nightmare. He becomes a non-‐person.... He is condemned to survive by techniques which would unfit him for that open society." Of these plaintiffs, Dr. Korn said "... they pointed out the ways they had found to survive in isolation interfered with them when they went out into the open prison". He further stated that, in his experience, this process is foolproof and if you keep it up long enough, it will break anybody. In a U.S. prison where he was employed, he stopped the practice of lengthy period of solitary. He said "this is a form of murder, it has to stop".112
After surveying the B.C. Penitentiary and its SCU, Dr. Korn formed the opinion that
the SCU was cruel to both the inmates and the staff; according to Dr. Korn, the
correctional staff had every reason to believe that men who were caged and treated
with that degree of cruelty would behave like animals.113 Inmates in such a
situation would turn to self-‐harm, a type of pain which they could start and stop at
their discretion, as a way to have some control over their personal circumstances.114
He opined that the psychological effects on the plaintiffs would be “lifelong.”115
111 McCann v. Canada, supra note 4 at para. 53. 112 Ibid. at para. 54. 113 Ibid. at paras. 59-‐60. 114 Ibid. at para. 57. 115 Ibid. at para. 56.
47
Dr. Stephen Fox, an expert in the field of sensory deprivation, also testified on
behalf of the plaintiffs in McCann. In his extensive experience studying conditions of
solitude in prisons, Dr. Fox found the B.C. Penitentiary’s SCU to be one of the worst
facilities that he had ever experienced. According to Dr. Fox, the SCU at the B.C.
Penitentiary was a place where inmates were broken down to a point where their
lives had no meaning, where they came to be nothings. In such a setting, inmates
lost all sense of identity and dignity, came to have no respect for their own lives and
certainly lost any respect that they had for anyone else’s life. They became a danger
to all they met as they had been transformed, as a result of their torture, into a kind
of “sub-‐human”. They lost the ability to love.116
Finally, Dr. Anthony Marcus, a then-‐practicing psychiatrist in Vancouver,
testified on behalf of the plaintiffs based on his interviews with them. Dr. Marcus
opined that the crushing conditions of solitary confinement had burnt into the
plaintiffs’ personalities a sense of “hate, mistrust, and tension,”117 and he conveyed
his clinical opinion that the conditions of the SCU had “seriously affected” each one
of the plaintiffs.118
Much of what these experts were claiming in 1975 is echoed in the more
recent work of Dr. Stuart Grassian, psychiatrist and former faculty member of
Harvard’s medical school. Grassian has extensive experience studying the effects of
116 Ibid. at paras. 62-‐64. 117 Ibid. at para. 66. 118 Ibid. at para. 67.
48
isolation within disciplinary settings. In his scholarly article “Psychiatric Effects of
Solitary Confinement”,119 Grassian posits that changes to the brain of someone kept
in solitary confinement begin to happen within just a few days. Deprived of any
meaningful stimulation, inmates grow prone to finding it difficult to focus their
attention and to redirect their attention once they have achieved a state of focus.
Their topics of rumination tend to be unpleasant, such as an annoying sound or
smell, a perceived slight or an unpleasant bodily sensation. Grassian describes this
state as one of “stupor and delirium.”120
Significantly, Grassian’s evaluation of over two hundred inmates who have
experienced solitary confinement has caused him to believe that the constellation of
psychological symptoms common to such inmates reflects a distinct psychiatric
syndrome. The features of this syndrome include hyperresponsivity to external
stimuli, e.g., becoming very annoyed by an unobtrusive noise such as the sound of a
faucet turning on; experiencing perceptual distortions and hallucinations;
experiencing panic attacks; having difficulty with thinking, concentration and
memory; suffering frightening intrusive thoughts (often violent and vengeful);
paranoia; and experiencing problems with impulse control, e.g., “snapping” and
finding oneself engaged in property destruction or self-‐harm.121 Grassian notes that
some of these symptoms are psychiatrically very unusual and the clustering of
119 Stuart Grassian, “Psychiatric Effects of Solitary Confinement” (2006) 22 Wash. U. J.L. & Pol’y 325. 120 Ibid. at 327-‐331. 121 Ibid. at 335-‐336.
49
symptoms that has observed amongst isolated prisoners virtually unique.122
According to Grassian, hyperresponsivity to stimuli to the point of creating a painful
response in the subject is so rare that it suggests “organic brain dysfunction.”123
While many of these symptoms will reverse upon social reintegration, Grassian
warns that many people who are forced to endure the effects of prolonged isolation
will suffer harm that is permanent.124 As Lisa Guenther argues in “The Living Death
of Solitary Confinement,” the harm done by solitary confinement, by removing
people from a social context, is ontological; as relational creatures who, by nature,
look to one another for confirmation of our own experience, prolonged solitude
affects human beings at their very core.125
Addressing the plight of the already mentally ill inmate who finds himself in
segregation, the Ontario Court of Appeal in the recent decision of Centre for
Addiction and Mental Health v. Ontario, 2012 ONCA 342 acknowledged the further
damage that is done to the mentally ill within such settings:
When a facility with a Special Needs Unit does not have space in the Unit, and in other jails that do not have such Units, the mentally ill person is commonly (although not always) held in segregation. The evidence indicates this experience can exacerbate their symptoms, lacking as it does the “therapeutic quiet” offered to agitated psychotic patients in a psychiatric facility.126 [Footnote omitted]
122 Ibid. at 337. 123 Ibid. at 337. 124 Ibid. at 332. 125 Lisa Guenther, “The Living Death of Solitary Confinement” The New York Times (26 August 2012), online: http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/08/26/the-‐living-‐death-‐of-‐solitary-‐confinement/?hp. 126 Centre for Addiction and Mental Health v. Ontario, 2012 ONCA 342, at para. 31.
50
As the following chapter will indicate, the court did not select the expression
“therapeutic quiet” by accident.
51
CHAPTER THREE FROM PENITENCE TO PUNISHMENT: AN HISTORICAL ACCOUNT
OF SOLITARY CONFINEMENT If there was anyone still alive who could give you a truthful account of conditions in the early part of the century, it could only be a prole. Suddenly the passage from the history book that he had copied into his diary came back into Winston’s mind, and a
lunatic impulse took hold of him. He would go into the pub, he would scrape acquaintance with that old man and question him. He would say to him: ‘Tell me about your life when you were a boy. What was it like in those days? Were things
better than they are now, or were they worse?’127
While solitary confinement may seem to be the most brutal punishment
exacted by the modern Canadian penal system, it was not intended as such. An
understanding of how dramatically divorced the practice of solitary confinement
has become from the philosophy of its conception requires a journey through the
history books. Only then does it become apparent how adrift are our penal
practices from their original justifications. More worrisome still is the impression
that justifications for penal practice are ever-‐changing stopgaps that fill in, as might
a substitute teacher, to respond to the demands of the particular day.
John Howard is the oft-‐considered father of the penal practice of solitary
confinement. Michael Ignatieff concluded his work A Just Measure of Pain: The
Penitentiary in the Industrial Revolution 1750-1850 with the comment: “Had
Howard lived to see his offspring, he might well have denied paternity; but the
127 Orwell, supra note 1 at 90.
52
Birminghams and the Pentonvilles were his children nonetheless.”128 In an English
House of Commons debate, circa 1800, one member stated that “‘the late Mr.
Howard was certainly one of the worthiest men who had ever existed …. [but] if he
had been one of the worst, he could not have suggested a punishment of a more
cruel and mischievous description.’”129 Given the common attribution of the
practice of solitary confinement to the John Howard, an appropriate place to begin
this historical review is with the man himself. Who was John Howard and why was
he so well-‐respected?
John Howard (1726-‐1790) is remembered primarily as a prison reformer. In
1977, he wrote The State of the Prisons, a work that ultimately proved to be a
template for the first penitentiaries.130 The State of the Prisons was a product of
Howard’s work as county sheriff, work which caused him to tour and documented
all prisons in England and Wales in order to gain an appreciation of what aspects of
penal practice were succeeding and what needed reform.131
An understanding of Howard’s interest in and views on prisons and
penitentiaries requires an understanding of Howard the man. Howard was a
member of a moderate Calvinist sect,132 his membership in which, according to
Ignatieff, formed the basis of his Spartan lifestyle:
128 Ignatieff, supra note 62 at 208. 129 Ibid. at 130. 130 Ibid. at 47. 131 Ibid. at 52. 132 Ibid. at 49.
53
Throughout life, he rose at dawn, took a cold bath every morning, and after prayers dressed himself “after the style of a plain Quaker.” His diet for a whole day consisted of nothing more than “two penny rolls with some butter or sweetmeat, a pint of milk and five or six dishes of tea with a roasted apple before going to bed.” He was a “lover of order and regularity” in all his affairs and was particularly noted for strict punctuality and for “the exact and methodical disposition of his time.133 Howard’s wife died in childbirth leaving to Howard the job of parenting his
son, his approach to which seemed informed by his aesthetic principles of restraint.
Instead of hitting the boy with a cane or administering any other form of physical
punishment, Howard chose to confine him to the root cellar of their home when he
felt the need to impose discipline. Howard would not comfort his son when he cried
lest he learn that he could obtain the things he wanted through complaint and
protest.134 The boy was fed a strictly vegetarian diet. At the age of five years,
Howard sent his son away to boarding school and, thereafter, saw him
infrequently.135 At the age of 21, the young man became mentally ill. Though
Howard wrote letters to his troubled son, he left him alone in the asylum where he
was committed. In a letter to his son’s guardian, Howard asserted his belief that
only solitary confinement could heal the young man.136 Even Howard’s closest
friends were disturbed by the dispassionate aloofness with which he treated his
133 Ibid. at 50. 134 Ibid. at 48. 135 Ibid. at 48. 136 Ibid. at 49.
54
own child.137 With the clarity of hindsight, it might be said that Howard’s son’s
decent into mental illness may have portended the fate of those inmates who would
later be subjected to Howard’s regime of solitary confinement.
Arguably, the severity that Howard showed his son was magnified in his
harsh reflections upon his own character. Howard’s diaries, wherein he referred to
himself as a “worm” and “vile creature” with a “polluted soul”, reveal him to be
someone who was highly self-‐critical if not self-‐loathing.138 He was a wealthy man
who did not need to work to earn a living but who greatly desired to discover his
vocation so that he could make a contribution to his community.139 In light of his
self-‐concept, it is perhaps not surprising that Howard felt at home in prison settings
and found his vocation in his role as sheriff when he began touring the prisons of
England and Wales.140 It seems that the prisoner represented to Howard his own
sinful nature.141
Motivated by his empathic identification with inmates, Howard conducted
his review of prisons with the same unrelenting discipline that he displayed in all
facets of his life; he documented the details of each prison methodically, taking note
of the inmate population, the dimensions of a cell, the diet provided, the weight of
137 Ibid. at 49. 138 Ibid. at 51. 139 Ibid. at 50-‐51. 140 Ibid. at 52. 141 Ibid. at 54; Christopher Harding et al., Imprisonment in England and Wales: A Concise History (London: Croom Helm, 1985), at 112-‐113.
55
the shackles used and many other facts of daily institutional life.142 It was this
rigorous methodology that distinguished John Howard from the other prison
reformers of his day. Ahead of his time, Howard conducted his analysis in the
manner of a true social scientist and, as such, was able to paint the world of the
prison with exacting detail.143
A religious man, Howard credited God with revealing his vocation to him,
thereby pulling him out of his lost and aimless state.144 It was his own reformation
that gave Howard faith in the possibility that all inmates could be improved and
turned into productive citizens.145 Ignatieff expressed Howard’s identification with
prisoners most artfully:
From his own internal battle, he knew how faint the line was between those on either side of the moral law. His proposals for the abolition of fees and fetters, the establishment of a regular diet, the provision of religious instruction, and protection against disease were moved by the belief that these were the due of all sinners, be they felons or judges.146
Significantly, especially in light of how we have come to consider prisoners, Howard
rejected the notion that criminals constituted a societal “other”. Rather, he believed
that inmates, like all people, were imbued with reason and were capable of both
feeling shame for their misdeeds and of becoming better citizens. In fact, it was
142 Ignatieff, supra note 62 at 52. 143 Ibid. at 52. 144 Ibid. at 56. 145 Ibid. at 56. 146 Ibid. at 56.
56
Howard’s belief in the universality of reason that gave him confidence in his regime
of solitary confinement: left in peace and quiet with time to reflect, inmates would
inevitably recognize the error of their ways.147 Placed in solitude, nothing “would
divert offenders from contemplating their own guilt.”148 Howard had confidence
that, when set apart from the noise and distraction of society, the inmate’s rational
nature would prevail. As Professor Michael Jackson commented in his work
Prisoners of Isolation, Howard considered solitude a pre-‐requisite to moral re-‐
education.149
The expression “timing is everything” has particular import with respect to
the history of the practice of solitary confinement. John Howard’s proposal for
change, namely the substitution of punishments targeting the mind and the soul for
punishments that targeted the body, had particular resonance during the late 18th
century. A brief historical overview of punitive practice is required to facilitate an
understanding of why Howard’s proposals for change made the impression that
they did. This overview will provide a background to understanding how two
seemingly unrelated events, the American War of Independence and the death of
inmate Ashley Smith, are, in fact, connected.
147 Ibid. at 71; Michael Jackson, Prisoners of Isolation: Solitary Confinement in Canada (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1983) at 13 [Jackson, Prisoners of Isolation]. 148 Ignatieff, supra note 62 at 72. 149 Jackson, Prisoners of Isolation, supra note 147 at 15.
57
Though it is difficult to imagine given our society’s current penchant for
remanding offenders into the custody of the state, prior to 1775, England used
imprisonment only rarely as a punishment for criminal offences.150 When
imprisonment was used as punishment, it was in response to an offence that was
relatively minor in nature (e.g., vagrancy, desertion of one’s family, theft of field
produce, etc.) and the period of incarceration was generally less than three years.151
The punishments that were imposed with greater frequency than incarceration
were quick and acute, and included flogging, placement in the pillory stocks,
transportation to the colonies, or hanging. The criminal’s body was the locus of
punishment; it was bound, or it was whipped, or it was deported, or it was hanged.
Punishment was a spectator sport. It took place in public squares and invoked
denunciation in a way unknown to today’s less public modes of punishment. The
most dramatic “performance” of the day, and the ultimate expression of
denunciation, was the public hanging.
Given the very real outcome for the offender, it might seem callous to refer to
a public hanging as a performance. However, as Ignatieff expressed in his historical
review of punitive practice, the deterrent success of a hanging depended upon the
public’s willingness to play their role as horrified and condemning onlookers. He
commented:
All such ritual punishment depended for their effectiveness as a ceremonial of deterrence on the crowd’s tacit support of the authorities’ sentence. Hence, the magistrates’ control of the ritual was limited. In theory, the
150 Ignatieff, supra note 62 at 15. 151 Ibid. at 15, 24.
58
processional to the gallows and the execution itself were supposed to be a carefully stage-‐managed theatre of guilt in which the offender and the parson acted out a drama of exhortation, confession, and repentance, before an awed and approving crowd.152 Notably, the crowd gathered to observe a hanging or other public
punishment did not always yell out “Crucify him!” as per their scripted part. On
occasion, the crowd identified with the condemned, offered him their support and
refused to acknowledge his guilt. Sometimes, the execution was followed by a
public revolt.153
Short of heroic intervention, the public could not change the fate of an
offender being led to the gallows. On the other hand, public non-‐compliance could
entirely undermine punishment effected through the pillory. Used especially in
response to crimes which commonly incited public indignation, such as the use of
false weights by shop-‐keepers or hoarding and speculation by members of the grain
trade, locking the offender in head stocks in the public marketplace was designed to
leave him open to the abuses of a scorned and indignant public.154 If, instead, the
members of the public did not consider themselves abused but rather felt
sympathetic to the plight of the man held in the stocks, they would not play their
part in the spectacle of blame and contrition. By refusing to hector the offender, the
community precluded punishment, exercising, in effect, an early version of jury
nullification.
152 Ibid. at 21. 153 Ibid. at 22-‐23. 154 Ibid. at 21.
59
When London magistrates, realizing the vulnerability of public punishment
to the emotions of the crowd, attempted to move executions from the public square
to within the prison wall, the idea was decidedly unpopular. The public feared the
abuses that might take place outside the scope to the public scrutiny. The offender
might be tortured or, the ultimate error, the wrong person might be executed. As
stated by Ignatieff, “[t]he crowd knew its role as witness in these matters.”155
The suggestion that hangings within prison walls would be an entirely novel
concept requires some qualification. Prisons certainly existed in the pre-‐1775 era,
but the membranes separating inside from outside were far more permeable than
those belonging to today’s penal institutions. A symbiotic relationship existed
between the prison world and its larger community such that, much more than
today, inmates belonged to two communities at once: the world of the prison and
the larger world to which the prison belonged. Ignatieff claimed that the prison was
a “state within a state” when it came to matters of “power and finance”.156 That may
be true, but when compared with the impenetrability of the penitentiary walls that
were to come, the degree of communication that existed between those on the
inside and those on the outside is remarkable.157
As mentioned previously, the prisoners in eighteenth century jails included
some petty offenders. Some of those confined were awaiting trial, transportation to
the colonies, or execution. For the most part, however, inmates were debtors who
155 Ibid. at 24. 156 Ibid. at 35. 157 Jackson, Prisoners of Isolation, supra note 147 at 14.
60
were unable to discharge their financial burdens.158 Though, in theory, inmates
were entitled to different treatment depending on their reason for their
incarceration, the reality of the eighteenth century English jail was that they were
chaotic. Regardless of their reason for being there, prisoners were mingled together
and no predictable distinction in treatment could be observed between those who
had been found guilty of a criminal offence, those who were presumptively innocent
and awaiting trial for a criminal offence, and those who were detained as a result of
unpaid fees. Some stayed in jail only because they lacked the funds to pay the prison
keeper the requisite exit fee.159 In all, it was a motley crew.
Notably, prisons were private institutions run by their keeper for profit. The
state was uninterested in being responsible for the maintenance and care of
inmates. The keepers of the prison did not want to spend their funds on feeding or
clothing those under their control. From a fiscal perspective, it made sense to allow
interaction at the prison gates between inmates and their families and friends who
would provide the inmates with what they needed to survive.160 Food, notes, and
letters were thrown to and fro over the prison walls, which, at least with respect to
communication, did not form a barrier but rather an obstacle. With respect to
visitation from loved ones:
[i]t was common for wives to appear daily at the gates bearing meals for their jailed husbands. They were given the run of the prison yards from
158 Ignatieff, supra note 62 at 28. 159 Ibid. at 31. 160 Ibid. at 34.
61
dawn until locking up, and a judiciously placed bribe would make it possible to remain inside at night.161
With the care of inmates left to the goodwill of the larger community, the prison
world lacked any kind of minimum standards. Prisons were overcrowded and
unsanitary. Inmates, and members of the justice system who had contact with them,
died of communicable diseases such as typhus.162
Along with forcing inmates to rely on the charity of their friends and family, a
further effort to minimize costs resulted in keepers hiring a minimal number of
“turnkeys” to supervise the inmate population.163 Furthermore, the inmates
themselves were often left to maintain the internal discipline of the prison world.
Aggrieved parties often resolved their disputes through boxing matches.164 Drawing
upon their own experiences with the court system, inmates would sometimes hold
mock trials that “were often savagely accurate buresques of the official ritual”.165 A
prisoner elite existed which was composed of inmates who were responsible for
enforcing the rules. This elite was established by the keepers of the prisons or
selected by the prisoners themselves.166
161 Ibid. 162 Ibid. at 44. 163 Ibid. at 30; Jackson, Prisoners of Isolation, supra note 147 at 9. 164 Ignatieff, supra note 62 at 41. 165 Ibid. at 40. 166 Ibid. at 39.
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It was this world of disease, disorder and carnivalesque self-‐policing that
John Howard explored in his role as sheriff. The obvious inadequacies of the prison
system were not the only factors militating in favour of the changes in penal practice
for which he, and other reformers, advocated. After all, it was only a minority of
offenders who were sentenced to time in custody. There were other tensions at
play, one of which was a growing discomfort with the severity of the Bloody Code,
the name by which the public commonly referred to the criminal law of the day.167
During the eighteenth century, the number of crimes for which an offender
would be put to death increased steadily. They included not only murder but also
robbery, breaking into homes, arson, and even offences such as stealing animals or
forgery.168 The severity of the black letter law was tempered by flexibility in its
application, inspired largely by a rejection of the severity of the system. Judges
would often pardon first-‐time offenders guilty of capital crimes in order to spare
them the death penalty, or order them transported to the colonies so that they
would escape the gallows.169 Some prosecutors only adduced partial evidence in
order to prevent a conviction being registered, while some victims, knowing the
penalty that would be imposed, did not want their offender to be prosecuted.170
Crowds gathered to observe a hanging often identified with the condemned and
made this sentiment well known through their defiant behaviour. As such, there
167 Ibid. at 17. 168 Ibid. at 16-‐17. 169 Ibid. at 19. 170 Ibid. at 19.
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was an “inversion of ritual, from a solemn act of the state to a popular bacchanal”
which “led some eighteenth century observers to doubt the efficacy of public
hangings as a deterrent.”171 In this climate of social unrest, and given what was
known of the prisons, punishment by transportation to the colonies became a much
more promising penal option. However, just when the importance of banishing
offenders to the colonies was most important, the 1775 outbreak of the American
War of Independence resulted in a halt in the transportation of convicts.172
The American War of Independence meant that, very rapidly, imprisonment
went from an infrequently imposed punishment to a punishment of first resort.173
Previously, most offenders sentenced to transportation were sent to the American
colonies of Maryland and Virginia. The outbreak of the American revolt sealed off
these depositories for convicts,174 and, essentially, there was nowhere left to send
inmates who would ordinarily be sentenced to transportation.175 A new penal
approach was desperately required. Old punishments, such as flogging, the pillory
or irregularly imposed hanging, did not seem to have the moral authority of yore.176
Furthermore, the loss of the colonial market, due to the War of Independence,
resulted in economic depression and the predictable associated rise in crime rates. 171 Ibid. at 23. 172 Ibid. at 80; Jackson, Prisoners of Isolation, supra note 147 at 14. 173 Ignatieff, supra note 62 at 81. 174 Seán McConville, A History of English Prison Administration: 1750-1877, vol. 1 (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981), at 105. 175 Harding et al., supra note 141 at 111. 176 Ignatieff, supra note 62 at 83.
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Government attempts at inspiring terror through public executions were not
effective. Instead, the solemnity of the ritual was subverted and the event turned
into a “thieves’ holiday and poor people’s carnival.”177 The state began to prefer
imprisonment as a form of punishment as it was set away from the public’s mocking
gaze.178 Quite quickly, it seems that the “problem of punishment became the
problem of imprisonment.”179
We cannot know whether John Howard’s The State of the Prisons would have
altered the course of penal history the way that it did had it not been published two
years after the outbreak of the American War of Independence. However, we do
know that the historical events around the beginning of the last quarter of the
eighteenth century made those in power more receptive to the ideas of John
Howard and the other reformers who advocated for new, more moderate
punishments to address crimes of intermediate severity;180 with transportation to
America suspended, new prisons had to be built and very quickly. The clear
problems with the existing prisons, exposed by The State of the Prisons, made
Howard’s proposal of solitary confinement more interesting than it would otherwise
have been. Howard’s campaign for punishments targeting the mind rather than the
body received attention, consideration, and ultimately acceptance. Hence, some
177 Ibid. at 88. 178 Ibid. at 90. 179 Markus Dirk Dubber, “The Right to be Punished: Autonomy and Its Demise in Modern Penal Thought” (Spring, 1998) 16:1 Law & History Rev. 113, at 122. 180 Jackson, Prisoners of Isolation, supra note 147 at 9.
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might say that, in the rise of the practice of solitary confinement, timing was
everything.181 After all, within the span of a single decade, the traditional
approaches to punishment had been thrown into doubt “by a crime wave that
refused to respond to the old remedies, by the suspension of transportation, and by
the arguments of reformers who contended that there was a more just and rational
way for the state to inflict pain on its subjects.”182 This more rational way was by
means of the penitentiary, a place set apart from the rest for society for doing
penance, for expressing remorse and achieving forgiveness.
John Howard and the other penal reformers responded to the chaos of the
existing prisons by recommending a new prison structure defined by unflinching
routine and structure. To guard against corruption or unequal treatment, jailers
were to be dispassionate in the administration of their duties, bringing nothing of
their personalities to their role, but rather moving from task to task as
emotionlessly as a cog in a wheel.183 Everything inside the penitentiary wall was to
be ordered, predictable and expressive of “a new conception of social distance
epitomized by uniforms, walls, and bars.”184 Significantly, punishment was to be a
matter for the state to control, not private businessmen.185 Many of the new rules
181 Ignatieff, supra note 62 at 79. 182 Ibid. at 93. 183 Ibid. at 104. 184 Ibid. at 113. 185 Ibid. at 77.
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applied to the guards and were aimed at preventing fee taking, physical violence and
other abuses directed toward inmates.186
While these new regulations aimed to protect the inmate, the public had lost
its role as audience and guardian of convicts’ rights. No one from the outside was
watching to ensure that what should be happening was actually happening:
As a ritual of state power, penitentiary discipline contrasted sharply with the ritual of public punishment. Whereas the public execution afforded both the public and the offender a role that the state was unable to control, the rites of discipline allowed no such opportunity. They were played out in private, behind the walls of the institution, according to the state’s rules. The inmate could still defy those rules, but that defiance could not call on the support of the watching crowd. Discipline, therefore, was a new rite, one from which the public was locked out. Unlike the condemned man, the prisoner was bound to silence. Even if he or she did cry out, there was no one to listen.187 A new era of crime and punishment had dawned in which the world of the
offender had been extracted from the world of the offended community. Corporeal
punishment, considered to possess no rehabilitative value, had been largely
rejected.188 Instead of being whipped and sent on their way, those accused of petty
crimes were sent to prison for the reformation of their souls.189 According to
Howard, it was the moral legitimacy of punishment that was imperative. Brutal
physical punishments by the state, such as flogging, engaged the sympathy of the
masses and detracted from the criminal conduct that was being addressed. Solitary
confinement, on the other hand, was rational and just, made the offender the subject
186 Ibid. at 77. 187 Ibid. at 105. 188 Jackson, Prisoners of Isolation, supra note 147 at 12. 189 Ignatieff, supra note 62 at 108.
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of no one’s pity, and left him to be his own worst tormenter as he realized his own
sins. The inequalities and abuses of existing prisons had to be redressed so that the
public could have confidence in the administration of justice, so that all rational
creatures were treated with the dignity that they deserved and so that the offender
did not become another victim in his own eyes and the eyes of society. According to
Howard:
…the most painful punishments, those that aroused the greatest guilt, were those that observed the strictest standards of justice and morality. From such punishment there could be no psychological escape into contempt for the punisher, assertions of innocence, or protests against its cruelty. Nothing in the penalty’s infliction would divert offenders from contemplating their own guilt. Once convinced of the justice of their sentence and the benevolent intentions of their captors, they could only surrender to the horrors of remorse.190 Howard approved of the plans for the first English penitentiaries, built in the
1790s, which he believed reflected his plan for the reformation of offenders.191
However, not everyone shared Howard’s enthusiasm for the regime of solitary
confinement, even in the natal days of its widespread practice. The moral legitimacy
of solitary confinement, which Howard had considered beyond reproach, was
attacked by some who claimed that targeting the mind and not the body failed to
make the treatment any less brutal. Some questioned the notion that rehabilitation
could take place in the absence of a social context.192
190 Ibid. at 72. 191 Ibid. at 95. 192 Ibid. at 118.
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Howard, who died in 1790, did not live to hear much of this criticism. We are
left to wonder what he would have thought of his legacy. Howard himself never
advocated for extensive periods of unbroken solitary confinement. He worried that
perpetual isolation would break, rather than reform, a man’s spirit.193 In light of his
views on the dangers of relentless isolation, Ignatieff asked:
What would [Howard] have though then of solitude enforced for eighteen months; of the walled pens where prisoners exercised alone; of the masks, the drills, the silence? Hearing the screams issuing from the dark cells, would he have begun to think again about replacing “punishment directed at the body” with “punishment directed at the mind”?194
Knowing what we do of Howard’s philosophy, it seems likely that Howard
would not have approved of the extreme implementation, and thus the grave
distortion, of his penal plan. Howard was not alive to protest,195 but the good name
of a man with a “quasi-‐saintly character”196 was available to legitimize a practice
that bore little resemblance to what he intended. In short, a genie was out of the
bottle. The “rule of silence”, whereby inmates were either kept in total isolation or
were forced to abstain from any type of interaction with fellow inmates, became a
popular mode of control in prisons from the 1820’s onwards.197 American prisons
in New York and particularly in Pennsylvania followed suit. Inmates in Philadelphia
193 Jackson, Prisoners of Isolation, supra note 147 at 15. 194 Ignatieff, supra note 62 at 207. 195 However, before his death, Howard did reject the Philadelphia prison model of total seclusion as “an excessively zealous application of his ideas.” Ignatieff, supra note 62 at 194. 196 Harding et al., supra note 141, at 113. 197 Ignatieff, supra note 62 at 177.
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would sometimes spend five years in total seclusion.198 Our prisons bear the mark,
however distorted, of John Howard.
In his article “The Right to be Punished: Autonomy and Its Demise in Modern
Penal Thought”, Markus Dirk Dubber addressed the “golden age” of modern criminal
law (1750-‐1850), analyzing the progression away from corporeal punishment based
on its cruelty and moral indefensibility to the imposition of “therapeutic”
approaches, such as solitary confinement, to the point of a new cruelty. By way of
summary, he commented:
[t]he story of the right to be punished begins with an affirmation of the offender’s autonomy and ends in its denial. Along the way identity turns into difference as empathy gives way to indifference. In the end, the transformation of the right to be punished into the need for treatment poignantly illustrates that the Enlightenment project to legitimize state punishment has failed and that hypocrisy has taken the place of legitimation.199 Dubber’s article helps to bridge the gap between John Howard’s vision for a
more humane prison system and the system we have today. Before the historical
review of this chapter is complete, we must acknowledge that, in the span of little
more than two centuries, the predominant goal of punishment has shifted from
198 Ibid. at 194. In In Defense of Flogging (New York: Basic Books, 2011), at 40, Peter Moskos described New York’s early practice of solitary confinement thus: “To maintain silence, guards wore slippers to muffle footsteps, and tracks carried food carts with leather-‐covered wheels. When not in the cells (coming or leaving prison, for instance), inmates’ heads were covered in hoods. The goal, prison commissioners said, was to keep prisoners so isolated that if they were in prison on election night, they wouldn’t know who was the president of the United States when they were released.” 199 Dubber, supra note 179 at 116.
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restoring sameness to curing difference and, then, to hiding or eliminating
difference. Each philosophical pivot was subtle but significant and moved us from a
prison reformer who hoped that a man’s reason could be recovered by a brief
period of solitude to a system in which people are kept in isolation for years, with no
hope of improving them.
Howard and the other penal reformers of the Enlightenment emphasized the
common humanity, the sameness, of the offender and the punisher.200 The concept
of “empathic identification” with the offender was essential to their rejection of the
violent punishments of the day such as flogging and hanging.201 The idea that the
inherent reason of those punished could be strengthened in conditions of solitude
such that the offender could recognize his transgressions was, in fact, an assertion of
the offender’s essential humanity and reasonableness.
In contrast to the succeeding rehabilitationists, the penal reformers of the
late eighteenth century recognized that, even under their scheme, the offender was
being punished. The locus of the punishment was different than before, aimed, as it
was, at the offender’s soul rather than his physical body.202 However, the
experience of solitary confinement would necessarily result in a degree of pain as
the inmate would ultimately and inevitably be forced to experience remorse for his
wrongdoing.
200 Ibid. at 133. 201 Ibid. at 133. 202 Ibid. at 124.
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The rehabilitationists, on the other hand, classified their plan for offenders as
treatment rather than punishment. Any pain that was occasioned was merely an
undesirable side-‐effect of the treatment that the offender needed to get well.203 As,
according to the rehabilitationists, the state was not intentionally inflicting pain but
rather helping provide treatment for those who required it and were entitled to it,
the need to legitimize the actions of the state was not nearly as pressing. Treatment
of an illness is presumptively a good thing, whereas inflicting pain is presumptively
bad. Recasting pain as treatment went along with a recasting of the offender as sick
and different instead of equal but misguided. Dubber noted:
The offender no longer deserved punishment because he was a fellow member of the community of rational agents to which the observer also belonged. He now needed correctional treatment to overcome whatever deficiency had proved him unworthy of membership in that community. Punishment no longer affirmed the offender's dignity as a fellow person; instead it corrected the offender's abnormality.204
Choice of language became increasingly important in the effort to promote goal-‐
oriented treatment and minimize punitive side effects. “Civil commitment” in the
United States does not sound much like punishment.205 Similarly, under the
legislation reviewed in Chapter Two, “administrative segregation” does not sound
like punishment, particularly when “punitive segregation” exists as a distinct
category of treatment.
According to Dubber, this change in approach of the rehabilitationists led to
203 Ibid. at 125. 204 Ibid. at 137. 205 Ibid. at 131.
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the final shift in penal practice toward our current preference for incapacitation as
the goal of punishment. After all, once we decide that the offender is fundamentally
deficient in some way such that he cannot be socially reintegrated without
treatment, and then we realize that our rehabilitative efforts are largely ineffective,
it is only one small step to concluding that the deviant offender must simply be kept
away from the rest of society in order to keep the community safe.206 Peter Moskos,
author of In Defense of Flogging, notes that “[w]ithout even the lip service of
rehabilitation … long-‐term indefinite isolation has become the ultimate
punishment.”207
From pre-‐Enlightenment, to Enlightenment, to post-‐Enlightenment times, we
have seen penal practice transition based on an evolution in how we view the
offender in relation to ourselves. Enlightenment reformers saw prisoners as being
like them and their empathetic approach led to the deinstitutionalization of many of
the more sympathetic inmates such as debtors. Those who remained within prison
walls tested the boundaries of empathic identification, however, and came to be
viewed as sick, different, and in need of treatment. Once the bonds of empathy had
been broken, it became much easier to throw away the key.208 The fact that life
inside today’s prisons is removed from public view makes developing an empathetic
relationship with inmates all the more difficult. Without the affirmation of our
common humanity engendered by exposure or contact, and in light of established
206 Ibid. at 141. 207 Peter Moskos, In Defense of Flogging (New York: Basic Books, 2011), at 45. 208 Dubber, supra note 179 at 144.
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rhetoric that the offender’s deviance requires treatment, today’s punishment is
“unchecked by empathy and unjustified by autonomy.”209
The impenetrability of the modern Canadian penitentiary is perhaps most
stark when it becomes clear that not even the judiciary can do more than
recommend what takes place within its walls. In R. v. Desjarlais, [2008] A.J. No. 721
(S.C.J.), the trial judge sentenced the accused to ten year’s incarceration followed by
a period of ten years of supervision as a long-‐term offender. Dismissing the Crown’s
application to have the accused declared a dangerous offender, the court found that
the Crown had failed to demonstrate the prerequisites for a dangerous offender
designation, and that the lack of programming that had been provided to the
accused meant that his potential for rehabilitation was largely unknown.210 On its
own, the latter factor would have been sufficient for the sentencing judge to exercise
her discretion to refuse to declare the accused a dangerous offender.211
Furthermore, the court heard evidence that the accused would be highly unlikely to
receive any programming if he were declared a dangerous offender. Even with the
importance of treatment at the fore of the sentencing judge’s consideration, she was
only able to express a hope that he would receive the treatment he needed when
remanded into custody:
209 Ibid. at 146. 210 R. v. Desjarlais, [2008] A.J. No. 721 (S.C.J.), at paras. 87-‐88. 211 Ibid. at para. 87.
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It is my hope, however, and no doubt would be the hope of any reasonable informed member of the public that Mr. Desjarlais will be given access to all appropriate medical, psychological and psychiatric treatment available in the federal penitentiary system as well as access to all available programs designed to meet his needs, delivered in a fashion so as to address his learning disability so that when he is eventually released he will stand the maximum chance for success.212 As is customary, the sentencing judge directed that her recommendations
with respect to the accused’s sentence, noted below, be marked on his warrant of
committal:
• that Mr. Desjarlais be tested for brain damage and receive medical, neuropsychological and psychiatric treatment should the results of that testing reveal brain damage; a copy of these written reasons should be provided to any physician, psychologist or psychiatrist participating in such testing and treatment;
• that Mr. Desjarlais should be examined at the RPC in Saskatoon to determine if he suffers from a condition for which he could be treated and to receive treatment for any such condition; a copy of these written reasons should be sent to the attention of the administration of that institution when he is transferred there;
• Mr. Desjarlais should receive all available programming for
anger management while in the penitentiary; if anger management programming is available which is designed for the learning disabled he should receive that programming; all programming he receives should be programming tailored for the learning disabled if that version is available; and,
• as a condition of any eventual release Mr. Desjarlais should be
prohibited from being present within, including residing within, the geographical area served by the Drayton Valley or Stony Plain R.C.M.P. detachments.213
212 Ibid. at para. 92. 213 Ibid. at para. 96.
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Similar “recommendations” were made by the court in R. v. Nguyen, [1999]
O.J. No. 4730 (S.C.J.) and R. v. J.S., [1998] S.J. No. 247 (Prov. Ct.) (recommendations as
to where sentence was to be served – i.e., near family member/at a facility with
services for Aboriginal accused); R. v. Hanner, [2002] B.C.J. No. 1964 (Prov. Ct.) at
paras. 22-‐24 (recommendation that accused be placed on a methadone maintenance
program with caveat that the judge could not order the institution to do anything);
R. v. Kerschner, [2006] O.J. No. 4014 (C.J.) (recommendation marked on warrant of
remand that the accused be detained at a particular facility in order to facilitate
contact with his counsel); R. v. Robinson, [1997] O.J. No. 5973 (C.J.)
(recommendation that accused’s health issues be taken into consideration by the
correctional authorities); R. v. Mullins, [1994] O.J. No. 972 (C.J.) (recommendation
that the accused be psychologically assessed during his sentence); R. v. Boland,
[1994] O.J. No. 4246 (C.J.) (recommendation that the accused receive assistance for
substance abuse); R. v. C.W.K., [2005] O.J. No. 3230 (C.J.) (recommendation that the
accused receive counseling for anger management and alcohol abuse and receive
the opportunity to work on his high school education).
That even the judges tailoring an accused’s prison sentence can do no more
than recommend that such essential aspects of a sentence be followed reveals the
extent of carceral autonomy. The sentencing judge decides only the time to be spent
in custody but is powerless to control essential aspects of how that sentence is
imposed. In fact, one might argue that not even the length of the sentence is sacred.
As the following chapter will address, correctional officials can manipulate the
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effective length of the sentence by controlling the conditions an inmate is forced to
endure.
Returning to the question of what the American War of Independence has to
do with the death of Ashley Smith, it seems that the answer is both a little and a lot.
It was likely that it was the American War of Independence, and the resultant
suspension of the practice of transporting offenders to the colonies, that forced the
serious consideration of Howard’s notion of the penitentiary and the practice of
solitary confinement. It was this transitional time in the history of penal practice
that moved punishment indoors and away from public surveillance. Punishment
from that time forth was to be meted out locally, behind concrete walls and beyond
the purview, not only the community, but to a considerable extent the judiciary as
well.
In the Preface to the report Commission of Inquiry into Certain Events at the
Prison for Women in Kingston (“The Arbour Report”), the Honourable Louise Arbour
described Corrections Canada as the “least visible branch of the criminal justice
system, a state which is in “stark contrast to accountability processes in the law
enforcement and judicial branches.”214 Arbour noted the “robust adversarial
fashion” of the inquiries into the performance of police officers, prosecutors and
judges alike,215 an approach that does not seem to continue inside the prison walls.
It must be asked: do we care about procedural fairness only up until the passage of
sentence? More likely it is that we only respond to what we see and know. Today, 214 Arbour Report, supra note 9 at v. 215 Ibid.
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we do not have the opportunity to undermine a sentence by embracing the inmate
locked in the pillory stocks if we believe that his treatment is unjustified. In short,
the public has been shut out from the process of punishment. This closing of the
door on a concerned public may have contributed to the death of Ashley Smith.
Of course, in a more linear sense, the death of Ashley Smith and the American
War of Independence are two discrete points on an historical timeline with very
little connecting them. The solitary confinement that Howard envisioned as an
alternative to the practices of the day bears little resemblance to the treatment that
Smith experienced during her final years, the term “therapeutic quiet” merely a
vestige of an earlier era when therapy or rehabilitation was the goal of isolation.
Over time, isolation inspired by empathic identification with inmates who were
believed to be capable of rehabilitation gave way to an attitude that inmates were
fundamentally deficient and could only be isolated and controlled.
The history of solitary confinement is a troubling chronicle of shifting
justifications. Solitary confinement was proposed as a humane way to treat inmates
who were deserving of dignity and possessed the same power of reason as all other
human beings. It was hoped that time spent in a state of quiet contemplation would
reveal to them their deficiencies. The rehabilitative aim of punishment, however,
seems to have eroded the premise that all humans are fundamentally equal as a
result of their shared ability to reason, instead recasting the prisoner as sick,
deficient, and requiring a cure. With this shift in thinking, the community’s
empathic identification with the offender began to slip away; he was no longer
someone fundamentally like them but was rather fundamentally different from
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them. When our belief in the prospect of rehabilitation wore thin, the offender was
successfully alienated from our conception of ourselves as law-‐abiding members of
the non-‐offending population. Conveniently, the cells that were once intended for
quiet reflection during an offender’s reformation doubled nicely as concrete vaults
in which to isolate dangerous offenders who could be controlled in no other way. As
Michael Jackson comments in Justice Behind the Wall, “[w]hen the reasons change
and the activity remains, the reasons begin to look like excuses.”216
The current practice of solitary confinement is divorced from its original
intended purpose. What was meant to be a practice of compassion has been
reinvented as the harshest of punitive sanctions. Though hopefully hyperbolic in
this context, the words of William Bulter Yeats’ “The Second Coming” come to mind.
The poem begins:
Turning and turning in the widening gyre The falcon cannot hear the falconer; Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world, The blood-‐dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere The ceremony of innocence is drowned; The best lack all conviction, while the worst Are full of passionate intensity.217
216 Michael Jackson, Justice Behind the Walls (Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 2002), at 22 [Jackson, Justice Behind the Walls]. In a similar vein, Joane Martel noted: “it remains that the exclusionary rationales underlying the practice of segregation seem to move seamlessly in a flexible fashion between punishment, protection, prevention and quiet time, hereby participating to the longevity of this governance strategy for the management of problem populations.” Joane Martel, “To Be, One Has to Be Somewhere: Spatio-‐temporality in Prison Segregation” Brit J. Criminol. (2006) 46, 587-‐612. 217 William Butler Yeats: Selected Poems and Four Plays, 4th ed. by M.L. Rosenthal (New York: Scribner, 1996), at 89.
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CHAPTER FOUR A PLACE APART
In the Ministry of Love there were no windows. His cell might be at the heart of the building or against its outer wall; it might be ten floors below ground, or thirty above it. He moved himself mentally from place to place, and tried to determine by the
feeling of his body whether he was perched high in the air or buried deep underground.218
The Honourable Louise Arbour was commissioned to investigate the state
and the management of the Correctional Service of Canada in so far as it pertained
to the aftermath of a 1994 prisoners’ riot at what was then the Kingston Prison for
Women. In particular, the public outcry caused by the release of video depicting a
male emergency response team strip-‐searching female inmates in the segregation
unit within the prison demanded an investigation into the way that the Correctional
Service of Canada ran its operation.219 In the Commission of Inquiry into certain
events at the Prison for Women in Kingston, known as the Arbour Report, Louise
Arbour emphasized the obligation of Corrections Canada to preserve the “integrity
of the sentence” imposed by the court. This concept is essential to understanding
the state of lawlessness that currently exists within the world of solitary
confinement. The correctional branch of the justice system is responsible for
carrying out sentences pronounced by the courts. By unilaterally increasing the
severity of the sentence imposed, correctional authorities overstep their boundaries
218 Orwell, supra note 1 at 241. 219 Jackson, Justice Behind the Walls, supra note 216, at 353-‐354.
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just as surely as if the judiciary investigated criminal activity or the police decided
what evidence was admissible at trial. The separation of these powers is essential
to the transparency of the criminal justice system. The behaviour of each class of
participant within the system can be assessed only if the public is aware of the
boundaries of its respective role. When roles are overstepped, behaviour is
unexpected and is more likely to remain unknown and unchallenged.
In R. v. Barton, [2002] O.J. No. 4105 (C.A.), the court held that, when
determining the amount of credit to be assigned to an offender based on a period
spent in pre-‐sentence custody, the sentencing judge should consider not only the
duration of pre-‐sentence custody but also whether that time was spent in
segregation.220 The court’s recognition that time spent in segregation is more
onerous than time spent in the general population underscores the damage that is
done to the integrity of the sentence by the over-‐use of segregation. In essence,
when correctional authorities decide that an inmate will spend significant time in
segregation, without considering alternatives, they are fundamentally changing the
sentence imposed by the court. As Arbour stated in her Report:
Eight or nine months of segregation, even in conditions vastly superior to those which existed [at the Kingston Prison for Women in 1994], is a significant departure from the standard terms and conditions of
220 R. v. Barton, [2002] O.J. No. 4105 (C.A.), at para. 16. This decision was rendered before the Truth in Sentencing Act, S.C. 2009 came into force, limiting judicial discretion with respect to awarding sentencing credit for time spent in pre-‐sentence custody. Under the recent amendments to the Criminal Code, credit of 1.5 days for each day spent in pre-‐sentence custody is the maximum credit that can be given, thereby ending the judicial norm of awarding 2:1 credit. While the amendments do not make the court’s comment in R. v. Barton moot, sentencing judges’ ability to recognize pre-‐sentence time spent in segregation has been limited.
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imprisonment, and is only justifiable if explicitly permitted by law. If it is not legally authorized, it disturbs the integrity of the sentence.221 In an effort to suggest how to remedy the improper intensification of
custodial sentences caused by correctional mismanagement, Arbour proposed that
inmates be permitted to apply for a remedy of sentence reduction when held too
long in segregation. Reducing a sentence in such circumstances would not amount
to a windfall for the inmate, rather it would ensure that the integrity of the sentence
was respected; tinkering with the length of the sentence would serve as a
countervailing force to the improper adjustment made to the intensity of the
sentence. Arbour envisioned that an inmate could apply to the court that imposed
the original sentence for either a reduction in sentence or, in the case of a
mandatory sentence, an order directing the Parole Board to consider an earlier
release.
Allowing inmates to make such applications would mean the potential for
repercussions to flow from a failure on the part of Corrections Canada to honour
their governing legislation, just as the potential exclusion of evidence serves as a
disincentive to police officers who might otherwise exceed the scope of their
authority.222 The nature of Arbour’s disincentive is far less dramatic than the
exclusion of evidence under s. 24(2) of the Charter, however. Excluding key
evidence in the context of a criminal prosecution may destroy the Crown’s case and
result of the acquittal of a factually guilty person. Even acknowledging the
significance of many breaches of Charter rights, in the context of very serious 221 Arbour Report, supra note 9 at 144-‐145. 222 Ibid. at 183-‐184.
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charges for which the accused would stand to lose his liberty, it could be said that
the remedy more than restores the accused to his original position. On the other
hand, a reduction in sentence to account for what may only be euphemistically
described as procedural irregularities serves only to restore the offender to his
position at the time when his sentence was pronounced.
Despite her relatively modest proposal, Arbour anticipated resistance to her
idea and preemptively rejected any interpretation that she was opening a loophole
whereby inmates could avoid serving their sentence:
The rule that I am advocating here is nowhere near as drastic a form of redress as the Charter exclusionary rule. It creates no “windfall” for the benefit of the inmate, as the exclusionary rule is often perceived to do for the accused. Rather, a reduction of the term of imprisonment to reflect the illegally or unjustly imposed harsher conditions of imprisonment merely restores the original sentence to its full intended effect. There is truly no “windfall” for the inmate.223 Furthermore, Arbour expressed her awareness that the Correctional Service
of Canada might not take kindly to her suggestion that it was in need of external
judicial supervision in order to properly manage its own affairs.224 The reticence
with which Corrections Canada participated in the inquiry into the events at the
Kingston women’s prison helped to confirm for Arbour that the root of the problem
lay with the “deplorable defensive culture” within the Correctional Service of
Canada.225 More than a hint of cynicism can be detected in Arbour’s expression of
disappointment at the fact that, despite a tremendous amount of effort devoted to
223 Ibid. at 184. 224 Ibid. at 185. 225 Ibid. at 175.
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“the creation of a mass of documentation,” there did not appear to be an effective
method of retrieving those documents for review.226 However, in her estimation,
the insular nature of Corrections Canada was at the very heart of what went wrong
at the Kingston Prison for Women in 1994 and what helped to foster the misnomer
that, in a situation of crisis, following the law becomes optional.227 According to
Arbour, only an open dialogue between the participants in the justice system would
help to engender respect for the rule of law within the correctional branch:
In my view, if anything emerges from this inquiry, it is the realization that the Rule of Law will not find its place in corrections by “swift and certain disciplinary action” against staff and inmates. The absence of the Rule of Law is most noticeable at the management level, both within the prison and at the Regional and National levels. The Rule of Law has to be imported and integrated, at those levels, from the other partners in the criminal justice enterprise, as there is no evidence that it will emerge spontaneously.228
These words of Louise Arbour create the sense of longing to throw open the
windows of a long-‐cloistered attic, to clear the air and relieve some of the bottled up
tension therein. The world of corrections, however, is a world apart. Prying open
its windows is not easily done. Professor Michael Jackson has spent a great deal of
his professional life attempting to pry open some portal to Canadian correctional
facilities. He began his latest text, Justice Behind the Walls, with a brief historical
overview of his efforts to learn what life is like within prison:
My journey to better understand what we do in the name of justice when we sentence men and women to prison has taken me inside federal penitentiary as a university researcher, an advocate and lawyer for prisoners, and a human rights activist and reformer. I have interviewed hundreds of
226 Ibid. at 172. 227 Ibid. at 52 and 61. 228 Ibid. at 180.
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prisoners, some considered to be among the most dangerous men and women in the country. I have also interviewed the men and women charged with guarding and “correcting” those sentenced to prison. I have been inside prisons in the midst of riots, hostage takings, homicides, and stabbings, and I have borne witness to the explosive power of prisoners’ rage and frustration. My journey has taken me into segregation units – contemporary versions of Dante’s Inferno – where prisoners scream abuse and hurl their bodily fluids and guards respond violently with fire hoses and nightsticks. I have sat with prisoners hopeless beyond tears as they contemplate suicide, and I have knelt at the segregation cell door, scanning through the narrow food slot and barren interior of a prisoner’s world, begging a man not to use a razor blade to slash his eyeballs.229
Echoing concerns expressed in the Arbour Report, Jackson is concerned by
the invisibility of prison life. Up until the passage of sentence, and perhaps until the
final appeal is dismissed, the process of the criminal justice system is accessible for
scrutiny. However, once the sentence is absolute and the paddy wagon deposits the
inmate at the correctional institution to serve his time, the ability to scrutinize is all
but exhausted. Members of the public often celebrate a feeling of closure following a
criminal trial and experience satisfaction at justice having been served. Presumably,
though, justice is only served if the sentence that is exacted is the one that was
imposed. While some vengeful or particularly aggrieved members of the public may
delight in a sentence becoming more severe than was intended, there is surely no
true justice in a sentence that is largely arbitrary, with only rough boundaries set
and the content left to be coloured in at the pleasure of the correctional system.
Arguably, once an inmate enters custody, his need for social and judicial
oversight is greater than ever. As Jackson remarked:
229 Jackson, Justice Behind the Walls, supra note 216 at 2-‐3.
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The point at which the criminal justice system will have its greatest impact on the individual is the point at which for the legal profession the process has run its course. It is simply assumed that the prison sentence, whether by deterring, apportioning just desserts, rehabilitating, or simply incapacitating the prisoner for the duration of the sentence, serves the ends of justice. A significant part of [Justice Behind the Walls is] directed to challenging the legal profession to take seriously its responsibility to those men and women who are sentenced to imprisonment, as well as to challenging the assumption that the prison sentence, as administered by prison administrators and staff, does indeed serve the ends of justice.230 In an effort to determine whether life behind bars serves the ends of justice,
Jackson has spent a significant portion of his professional career exploring how the
justice system within prisons compares to the public criminal justice system.231 He
has focused on the internal disciplinary system within the prison with the goal of
assessing whether the system of prison justice was a fair one and, if not, to
determine how it could be made to be fair. As Jackson is arguably Canada’s most
prolific scholar on the legalities of Canadian prison life, his work deserves particular
attention. Though he has made strides in helping to realize Louise Arbour’s goal of
integrating the rule of law into the landscape of incarceration, Jackson’s work
reveals that, legally speaking, the world within prison is a fundamentally separate
space. This is particularly the case with respect to solitary confinement, a topic to
which Jackson is especially devoted.232
230 Ibid. at 16. 231 Ibid. at 187. 232 Professor Jackson’s Prisoners of Isolation, supra note 147, is a more focused text. Justice Behind the Walls, supra note 216, places the world of solitary confinement within the broader prison community, particularly its regime of decision-‐making.
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A Legal World Apart
While an inmate may be held in segregation for administrative or punitive
reasons, Jackson’s focus with respect to his investigation into procedural fairness
within the prison system rested with disciplinary hearings and reviews of inmates’
administrative segregation status. When Jackson began his research on procedural
fairness within the prison system in 1972, the legislative scheme was significantly
different from that of today; the legislation of the day, the Penitentiary Act and the
Penitentiary Service Regulations provided only a skeletal framework for the
procedure of disciplinary hearings.233 While Jackson’s initial impression regarding
prison disciplinary hearings was that the basic tenets of procedural justice were
respected, four months of observing such hearings led him to revise this initial
assessment. Instead, Jackson found that, in practice, there was a presumption of
guilt rather than of innocence, issues of conviction were not kept distinct from
issues of sentencing, there was undue reliance on hearsay and rumour, and there
was a lack of concern over achieving parity in sentencing.234 Rather than a quest to
discover the truth with respect to an event alleged to have taken place within the
institution, Jackson discovered that prison administrators considered disciplinary
hearings to be about having inmates take responsibility for their actions.235 The
presumption of guilt implicit in this perspective is self-‐evident and likely accounted
for the frequent practice of notifying the accused inmate no earlier than the morning
233 Jackson, Justice Behind the Walls, supra note 216 at 188. 234 Ibid. at 189. 235 Ibid. at 189.
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of the hearing; after all, a presumptively guilty inmate did not need time to prepare
for a hearing as he would have nothing meaningful to say in his defence. Giving him
some time to prepare for his hearing would only subvert “justice” by presenting him
with an opportunity to concoct a fabricated version of events.
The greatest problem that Jackson identified with the prison disciplinary
system, however, was the lack of independent decision-‐making. Commenting on the
lack of impartiality, Jackson wrote:
The overarching flaw in the warden’s court system was that the very people responsible for maintaining the good order of the institution were the ones judging whether prisoners had committed offences against that good order. The judges, in other words, were the offended parties. Furthermore, in most cases these adjudicators brought to the hearings considerable personal knowledge of the prisoners, based on their previous dealings, and it was therefore impossible for them to approach a particular case free of that bias. A further source of bias prejudicing objective judgement was a perceived need of prison administrators to maintain staff morale by accepting the testimony of guards where it conflicted with that of prisoners.236 Jackson’s comments make intuitive sense. In what other context would we
allow the aggrieved party to sit in judgment of the accused? Many of the common
institutional charges laid against inmate accused, such as assault, threatening or
destruction of property, directly involve the institution or institutional staff as the
complainant. At the very least, all institutional charges involve the institution as an
indirect complainant as the accused inmate is alleged to have breached the
institution’s code of conduct. Despite the obvious drawbacks and highly
questionable optics associated with having a party to the litigation sit in judgment of
the matter, Jackson faced considerable resistance in seeking to introduce
236 Ibid. at 190.
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independent decision makers into the prison system. To this day, independent
decision makers sit in judgment of only serious disciplinary offences. Hearings with
respect to alleged “non-‐serious” disciplinary offences and hearings to determine
whether inmates will remain in administrative segregation continue to be
adjudicated by institutional personnel.
Pursuant the recommendation of a 1975 Study Group on Dissociation, the
Solicitor General accepted that legally-‐trained independent chairpersons should be
employed within maximum and medium security institutions on an experimental
basis. The first of such appointments was made in 1977.237 In 1983, Jackson
returned to Matsqui Institution, the medium security penitentiary in British
Columbia where he had made his initial observations, to assess the changes brought
about by the independent chairperson. He also observed the disciplinary
proceedings at the maximum security Kent Institution, also in British Columbia.
After six months of observation, Jackson concluded that the introduction of an
independent decision-‐maker had resulted in substantial change and an almost
tripling of the acquittal rate:
…there had been a significant number of acquittals before the Independent Chairpersons in circumstances where, under the old regime, convictions would almost certainly have been entered; the difference was attributable to the Chairperson’s being prepared to render a decision based upon a reasonable doubt, notwithstanding strong institutional pressures for a conviction.238
The introduction of independent decision makers, where they were in fact
introduced, did not make for procedurally perfect disciplinary hearings, however. 237 Ibid. at 191-‐192. 238 Ibid. at 192-‐193.
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At Matsqui, Jackson found that the independent decision makers were not so
independent when it came to determining sentence, often accepting automatically
the sentence recommended by the staff advisors. Considering that most inmates
charged with a disciplinary infraction either pleaded guilty or were found to be
guilty, this overreliance on the staff members’ opinions as to sentence had a huge
practical effect and substantially undermined the potential value of the independent
decision makers. Staff advisors recommended sentences based on the room
available in the segregation cells, recommending segregation if there was space, and
other sanctions if there was not. As a result, Jackson found that the principle of
treating like offenders alike, important to our public criminal justice system, was
given short shrift.239 At Kent, Jackson did not find that there was the same blind
adoption of the staff recommendation as to sentence, but, as inmates were excluded
from the proceedings when the staff member made sentencing recommendations,
the convicted inmate remained ignorant of the process and, likely, suspicious.240
Although the introduction of independent decision makers was a positive
development, Jackson found that the unfairness and the lack of transparency in the
sentencing process slowly ate away at inmates’ respect for their jailers:
Life in the prison must go on, and most prisoners do not spend much time trying to figure out why some of them are sent to the hole for five days for an offence and others end up there for ten or fifteen days – to serve no segregation time at all – for doing the same thing. But like waves on a beach, this knowledge washes through the prison every day, continually eroding prisoners’ respect for authority that imprisons them.241
239 Ibid. at 195. 240 Ibid. at 194. 241 Ibid. at 195.
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The CCRA, reviewed in part in Chapter Two, was passed in June of 1992. This
Act set a limit of 30 days on the amount of time a person can be detained in
segregation for a single disciplinary offence (45 days is the limit in the case of
sentencing for multiple offences), established that charges involving serious
disciplinary offences would be adjudicated by the Independent Chairperson,
although minor charges would be adjudicated by an internal staff member, and
proclaimed inmates’ right to counsel when charged with serious disciplinary
offences. Subject to limited exceptions based on an inmate’s behaviour, the new
legislation affirmed an inmate’s right to be present throughout all aspects of the
hearing. These legislative changes were positive, but perhaps provided a false sense
of progress when more fundamental changes were still required. In an effort to
determine whether the new disciplinary process operated fairly in practice, Jackson
attended over 500 prison disciplinary hearings which, unlike criminal trials, are not
open to the general public.242
Jackson identified a major obstacle to the internal prison disciplinary system
achieving procedural justice in the lack of consistency with regard to whether
inmates are detained in administrative segregation pending the resolution of their
disciplinary charge.243 When such segregation occurs, the inmate may serve the
entire “sentence” before being acquitted at trial. In fairness, such injustices do take
place in the criminal justice system as well. When an accused person is denied bail
242 Ibid. at 201. 243 Ibid. at 212-‐213.
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pending the resolution of his criminal charges, it is not unusual for that individual to
face more time in custody awaiting trial than they would face upon conviction.244
However, when an inmate is detained in administrative segregation pending the
resolution of disciplinary charges, there is no bail hearing to be had, no opportunity
to test the strength of the case or to present a plan by which the inmate could safely
remain in the general population. In this context, the possibility that an inmate
might spend more time in segregation awaiting a hearing than he would be ordered
to spend upon a finding of guilt is particularly repugnant. Jackson does not shy
away from suggesting that pre-‐hearing segregation may be a technique used by
prison officials to wrest back some power from the independent decision makers
who are more likely to acquit than were those who used to call the shots.245
Emphasizing the importance of the informal decision-‐making that takes place
around the margins of the procedure established by the legislation, Jackson noted:
…the formal disciplinary process is but one area of prison decision-‐making, and in many cases decisions made by non-‐independent prison administrators regarding segregation … may overshadow, even supersede, the formal disciplinary outcome. Consider the numerous cases I have described here in which prisoners awaiting a hearing on disciplinary offences were confined in administrative segregation for longer periods than those to which they could be sentenced if found guilty. In these cases, regardless of the outcome of the process, the administrative practice of
244 Faced with this impossible scenario, many accused will choose to plead guilty rather than take their matter to trial. Though the courts have not overturned a guilty plea on this basis, the prospect of months spent waiting for trial in the case of an accused person who knows himself to be innocent, or to be facing less time upon conviction than he would awaiting trial, throws into question the voluntariness of a guilty plea. This issue, though highly problematic, is beyond the scope of this paper. It is mentioned here so as not to leave the reader with an unbalanced presentation of the prison justice system when compared with the criminal justice system. 245 Jackson, Justice Behind the Walls, supra note 216 at 248.
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segregation constituted the effective punishment. … It is therefore no surprise that prisoners view the disciplinary process as part of a seamless administrative web which they judge to be unfair.246 With respect to his experiences of the staff-‐run hearings for minor
disciplinary charges (which, of course, are not governed by an independent decision
maker), Jackson described a kangaroo court in which a plea was often not taken
from the accused, a presumption of guilt pervaded the proceedings, the accused
were excluded from key portions of the proceedings, in direct contravention of the
CCRA, and were not permitted to question the institution’s witnesses. One
particularly zealous prison supervisor managed to decide 38 cases within three
hours in what Jackson described as a “veritable tour de force” privileging
administrative efficiency over due process.
Unfortunately, Jackson’s description of the resolution of minor disciplinary
offences and the circumvention of independent decision making in the case of
serious disciplinary charges is reminiscent of the trial scene in Alice in Wonderland:
“Let the jury consider their verdict,” the King said, for about the twentieth time that day. “No, no!” said the Queen. “Sentence first – verdict afterwards.” “Stuff and nonsense!” said Alice loudly. “The idea of having the sentence first!” “Hold your tongue!” said the Queen, turning purple. “I won’t!” said Alice. “Off with her head!” the Queen shouted at the top of her voice.247
Alice, the independent outsider, may point out the absurdity of the process, but she
cannot truly change a system that is fundamentally adrift.
246 Ibid. at 283. 247 Lewis Carroll, The Annotated Alice: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland & Through the Looking Glass, introduction and notes by Martin Gardner (New York: Clarkson N. Potter, Inc., 1960), at 160-‐161.
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The most pernicious aspect of the system, the lack of independent decision-‐
making in the context of administrative segregation, noted in Chapter Two, causes
the legislative safeguards that do exist to ring hollow. As it stands, an inmate can be
detained in administrative segregation indefinitely with no review by an
independent adjudicator. For convenience, s. 31(3) of the CRRA is reproduced
below:
(3) The institutional head may order that an inmate be confined in administrative segregation if the institutional head is satisfied that there is no reasonable alternative to administrative segregation and he or she believes on reasonable grounds that
• (a) the inmate has acted, has attempted to act or intends to act in a
manner that jeopardizes the security of the penitentiary or the safety of any person and allowing the inmate to associate with other inmates would jeopardize the security of the penitentiary or the safety of any person;
• (b) allowing the inmate to associate with other inmates would interfere with an investigation that could lead to a criminal charge or a charge under subsection 41(2) of a serious disciplinary offence; or
• (c) allowing the inmate to associate with other inmates would
jeopardize the inmate’s safety.
Section 31(3)(a) is particularly permissive, allowing the institution to detain
an inmate in administrative segregation based on a reasonable belief that the
inmate’s presence in the general population would somehow jeopardize the security
of the institution or the safety of any person inside the institution.248 At no point,
according to the CCRA or the accompanying regulations, is the inmate entitled to
248 Jackson, Justice Behind the Walls, supra note 216 at 315.
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have his segregation status assessed by someone outside of Corrections Canada.
Frustrated by the broad scope of s. 31(3) of the CCRA, Jackson proposed his own
Model Segregation Code according to which an inmate could be segregated on
several bases. In the case of an inmate who is implicated on reasonable and
probable grounds in a specified criminal or disciplinary offence, he may be detained:
a) for up to one month if the presence of the inmate in the general population would intimidate potential witnesses, or
b) in the case of actual or threatened violence, the willful destruction of property, disobedience to orders and “a substantial likelihood that the offence will be continued or repeated”
Jackson’s Model Segregation Code allows for the exceptional detention of an inmate
in administrative segregation based on the belief that that inmate is a threat to the
security of the institution or the physical safety of staff or other prisoners if and only
if an independent adjudicator was satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the
threat posed by the inmate was serious and immediate.249 In all cases, the
institution would be required to defend the administrative segregation of the
inmate before an independent adjudicator within 72 hours of imposing the
segregated status. If unsatisfied with the evidence presented, the independent
adjudicator would be compelled to order the inmate returned to the general
population.250 According to the Model Code, administrative segregation would only
be permitted to exceed 30 days in the rarest of circumstances.251 Jackson insisted,
249 Ibid. at 321-‐322. 250 Ibid. at 312. 251 Inmates interviewed by Jackson commented that administrative segregation was much harder than punitive segregation as there was no known endpoint. With punitive
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however, that the linchpin of the Model Code is independent adjudication.252 All the
reasons why independent adjudication was established with respect to serious
disciplinary charges hearings apply in the context of administrative segregation and,
given the possibility of indefinite segregation on an administrative basis, they apply
all the more. Jackson summarized persuasively the need for independent
adjudication in the realm of administrative segregation:
First, the issues surrounding involuntary segregation are such that the interests of prisoners and correctional administrators are in conflict and facts and allegations are often in dispute; fairness requires an independent and unbiased decision-‐maker. Second, the recommendations of the Study Group on Dissociation failed to bring about real change, and there is a continuing issue of non-‐compliance with the law when segregation decisions are left with correctional administrations. Third, the potential for abuse and the potentially debilitating effects of long-‐term segregation require that limits be placed upon segregation in the form of specific criteria for placement, review, and the length of time for which segregation can be maintained; effective application and enforcement of these limits requires an independent adjudicator. Fourth, there is a need for a process to ensure that the rights and privileges of prisoners in segregation are respected, and this will be better achieved through an independent adjudicator.253 While time spent in segregation pursuant to a conviction for multiple serious
disciplinary offences cannot exceed 45 days, only the length of an inmate’s sentence
limits the length of time that an inmate may spend in administrative segregation.254
Jackson’s Model Segregation Code and other efforts have failed to change this segregation, an inmate knows the amount of time he is required to serve and have an end to anticipate. Inmates in administrative segregation do not know the endpoint of their suffering and feel powerless to hasten it. It is no doubt with these comments in mind that Jackson recommended a maximum time period that could be spent in administrative segregation, except in the rarest of circumstances. Jackson, Justice Behind the Walls, supra note 216 at 294. 252 Jackson, Justice Behind the Walls, supra note 216 at 313-‐314. 253 Ibid. at 313-‐314. 254 Ibid. at 316.
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reality. The CCRA’s assurance that an inmate in segregation enjoy the same right
and will be provided with the same conditions of confinement provided to inmates
in the general population is almost entirely deflated when the caveat is considered:
segregated inmates may be deprived of services and amenities that cannot
reasonably be granted due to the limitations of the segregation area and the
effective operation of that area.255 Essentially, the segregated inmate is told that he
can have everything except that which he cannot have.
A Social World Apart
While researching the world of Canadian penitentiaries, Jackson was a
student of the culture of prison life as well as the nature of internal disciplinary
systems. In writing Justice Behind the Walls, he was careful to express the
viewpoints of the correctional staff as well as the inmates and to consider the
particular stresses that affect both groups. Prisons are their own microcosms, but,
unlike other systems, they are largely closed. This insular quality causes an
intensification of regular emotions and reactions. Describing this unique
environment as a breading ground for stress and suspicion, Jackson wrote:
The closed nature of prison society is such that prisoners, and to a lesser extent guards, cannot take steps, as the rest of us in the larger society can, to change their life circumstances so as to remove themselves from the danger zone. Prison society is a pressure cooker in which hostilities and paranoia are intensified and in which personal insecurity and physical risk loom large.256
255 CCRA, supra note 67 at s. 37. 256 Jackson, Justice Behind the Walls, supra note 216 at 447.
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Louise Arbour made similar comments with respect to the insular nature of
segregation in her report on the aftermath to the 1994 riot at the Kingston Prison
for Women, when she remarked:
… it is not healthy for victims and aggressors to be locked in with each other, without intervention from anyone from the outside, particularly when the victims are the custodians of the aggressors. At that time more than at any other, it is imperative that openness prevail, and that every effort be made to involve persons or groups who, at more peaceful times, interact so effectively with both inmates and staff at the prison.257
Prison is a world full of rumours;258 inmates are often keen to exchange
secrets with correctional staff in exchange for a benefit. It is very difficult to develop
trust for your fellow human being in a situation in which a tip from a peer, whether
true or fictitious, could result in a transfer to a higher security classification (called
“reverse cascading”, true to Corrections Canada’s fondness for euphemisms), or
being placed within administrative segregation. Jackson’s experiences within the
prison world revealed to him that the allegations upon which transfers to higher
security levels and segregation units were made were often described in paperwork
as “information from a reliable source,” despite the fact that no independent
investigation was conducted to determine the truthfulness of such allegations.259
Inmates will often never know the identity of their accusers, let alone be able to test
their credibility in cross-‐examination. In such a world, feelings of paranoia are
inevitable. Inmates serving lengthy or life sentences lamented to Jackson that the
257 Arbour Report, supra note 9 at 61. 258 Jackson, Justice Behind the Walls, supra note 216 at 465. 259 Ibid. at 473.
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“con code” was a thing of the past; inmates used to show each other respect and
demonstrate a sense of solitary, but, now that they are treated as victims rather than
people who have chosen a criminal lifestyle, they have lost their sense of pride and
gained instead a willingness to sell each other out for any perceived potential
gain.260
Correctional staff opened up to Jackson about the stresses that they felt as
well. Long-‐serving staff members of staff, like long-‐term inmates, expressed some
disappointment in the changes that they have perceived over the years. More and
more, they sensed increasing pressure to create a paper trail, not because they felt
that it improved the quality of their work with inmates, but rather to appease
management and to protect themselves from any future inquiry.261
Psychologist Craig Haney has written about the particular pressures faced by
correctional staff, as well as inmates. Some of his work has focused on correctional
staff who spend time in the portions of prisons devoted to solitary confinement. The
particular pressure-‐cooker of solitary confinement comes, in part, from the self-‐
fulfilling prophecy that segregation houses the inmates who are the “worst of the
worst.”262 As a result of this general perception, correctional staff assigned to work
in solitary confinement, or “super-‐max” in the language of American corrections,
260 Ibid. at 96. 261 Ibid. at 94-‐96. 262 Craig Haney, “A Culture of Harm: Taming the Dynamics of Cruelty in Supermax Prisons” (August 2008) 35:8 Criminal Justice and Behaviour 956, at 963 [Haney, “A Culture of Harm”].
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expect their safety to be constantly under threat. The result of this expectation is
constant hyper-‐vigilance and anxiety:
The extreme deprivation, the isolating architecture, the technology of control, and the rituals of degradation and subjugation that exist in supermax prisons are inimical to the mental health of prisoners. But it would be naïve to contend that the nature of supermax environment does not also affect the staff that works inside. In many such places, an atmosphere of thinly veiled hostility and distain prevails, and the tension and simmering conflict are often palpable. The stress can be read on the faces of the correctional officers, who seem on edge, hypervigilant, even “pumped up.”263
Haney has remarked that reticence to acknowledge the harmful effects of the
supermax environment does a disservice, not only to the prisoners who are held
there, but also to the guards who are forced to work in the austere and threatening
conditions of segregation.264 These men and women are also the “captives” of the
“untenable supermax environment.”265
While the notion that the inmates housed in solitary confinement are the
“worst of the worst” is based on a false understanding of what leads to placements
within solitary confinement in the first place, a failure, for example, to recognize that
many of the inmates placed in solitary confinement find themselves there as a result
of a mental illness that prevented them to conforming to the institution’s
expectations when housed in the general population, the perception pervades
nonetheless.266 The “macho” culture of corrections encourages responding to the
263 Ibid. at 960. 264 Ibid. at 958. 265 Ibid. at 960. 266 Ibid. at 964.
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threat posed by an inmate population considered to be the “worst of the worst” with
decisive force.267
Significantly, correctional staff and inmates are trapped together by virtue of
the correctional officers’ chosen occupation. The closed nature of the solitary
confinement ecosystem prevents any dissipation of tensions. Rather, solitary
confinement units within prisons are kettles placed on hot elements and sealed off
so that no steam can escape. Hostility amasses, producing dysfunction reactions
and counter-‐reactions. An oppressive cycle continues.268
A De-Contextualized (Non) Space In his article “Mental Health Issues in Long-‐Term Solitary and ‘Supermax’
Confinement”, Haney emphasized the barren and de-‐personalized landscape of
solitary confinement:
… prisoners in these units live almost entirely within the confines of a 60-‐ to 80-‐square foot cell, can exist for many years separated from the natural world around them and removed from the natural rhythms of social life, are denied access to vocational or educational training programs or other meaningful activities in which to engage, get out of their cells no more than a few hours a week, are under virtually constant surveillance and monitoring, are rarely if ever in the presence of another person without being heavily chained and restrained, have no opportunities for normal conversation or social interaction, and are denied the opportunity to ever touch another human being with affection or caring or to receive such affection or caring themselves. Because supermax units typically meld sophisticated modern technology with the age-‐old practice of solitary confinement, prisoners experience levels of isolation and behavioral control that are more total and complete and literally dehumanized than has been possible in the past.269
267 Ibid. at 966. 268 Ibid. at 960-‐961. 269 Craig Haney, “Mental Health Issues in Long-‐Term Solitary and ‘Supermax’ Confinement” (January 2003) 49:1 Crime & Delinquency 124, at 126-‐127.
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Not only is the landscape of solitary confinement an incredibly barren one,
the total control of segregated inmates extends to what they are permitted to bring
with them into solitary confinement. Joane Martel has commented on how, unlike in
the general population of a prison, inmates in isolation are unable to bring with
them any personal effects to keep in their cells. Martel, who has studied the
experience of female Canadian prisoners in isolation since 1995, has noted that it is
not uncommon for women in prison to attempt to make their cells their own. Be
they photographs or books or letters, whatever possessions she has are very
important to an inmate’s ability to regain her sense of self within the prison world.
Having something that links the inmate back to before her period of incarceration is
essential to maintaining a sense of continued identity in the face of the stress of
incarceration; objects, in effect, are essential to “ensur[ing] continuity in one’s
biographical narrative.”270 Women placed in segregation, however, are not
permitted to bring along personal artifacts that would allow them to “territorialize”
their new space.271 In this way, movement to segregation forces inmates to forego
the items that they rely upon to perpetuate their sense of self despite their dramatic
change of circumstances. Instead of an attenuation, placement within segregation
means a definitive break from the life of the outside world.
270 Joane Martel, “To Be One Has to Be Somewhere: Spatio-‐temporality in Prison Segregation” (2006) 46 Brit. J. Criminol. 587, at 602. 271 Ibid. at 601-‐602.
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In addition to the stress of being moved to a de-‐contextualized space,
inmates in isolation lose a sense of control over the passage of time. According to
Martel, the passage of time is marked differently in prison. Instead of marking days
by days, months and years, the monotony of prison life causes these units to lose
their significance. What is important, in terms of marking time, are the rituals of
prison life including mealtime, mail time, recreational time, and visiting time.
Inmates maintain some power with respect to time by exercising their limited
choices, such as deciding whether or not to go check on the receipt of mail. In
Martel’s experience, inmates become very attached to the rituals of prison life and
become quite upset when they are somehow disrupted.272
Notably, in solitary confinement, the rituals of prison life are permanently
disrupted. Women interviewed by Martel reported that daily events, e.g., mealtime,
shower time, and time outside of one’s cell, rarely happened at a predictable time
from day to day. The constant illumination of the cells renders indistinguishable
night and day, causing a further sense of confusion with respect to time.
Furthermore, with such a perpetual state of idleness and loneliness, time seems to
pass more slowly in isolation, and may actually seem to stop entirely. Dr. Richard
Korn, who gave expert evidence on the effects of solitary confinement in the McCann
case, eloquently described the relationship between the conditions of incarceration
and the subjective experience of the passage of time:
Experienced prisoners can nicely calculate the impact of different spatial settings on the inner duration of the same unit of calendar time. How long does a calendar year last in the county jail? "Twice as long as a year in San Quentin," answers the ex-‐con from California. And a year in San Quentin?
272 Ibid. at 596-‐597.
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"Four times as long as a year on the street." And how long is a week in the "hole"? The respondent’s eyes become dream-‐like. "A month, two months . . . limbo." … Constricting a man’s space while simultaneously restricting his activities has a fantastically expansive effect on the crucial third dimension of Time. As space collapses inward toward the vanishing point, Time is ballooning out toward infinity.273
Thus, the conditions of solitary confinement effectively remove the inmate from
both space and time. According to Martel, this special and temporal dislocation has
a profound effect on an inmate’s sense of identity, as it is through our understanding
of time and space that we develop and maintain a sense of ourselves. We know who
we are in terms of where we have come from, where we are now and where we plan
to go later on: “…here I am in this familiar space at this particular moment in time. I
come from somewhere specific and recognizable with the objective of going
somewhere identifiable in a certain amount of time.”274 By placing the segregated
inmate in a position where she has no sense of connectedness to her past and no
rootedness in the present, solitary confinement erodes her sense of who she is. Her
de-‐contextualized environment goes a long way to reducing her to a non-‐person. As
described by Martel, “…prison segregation adds up to being a space with a
(non)story as women slip from collective memory—a space which, then, becomes a
place of human insignificance.”275
The de-‐contextualization of solitary confinement affects the way in which
273 Richard Korn, “Liberating the Future from the Past? Liberating the Past from the Future?” (1998), cited in Jackson, Justice Behind the Walls, supra note 216, at 325. 274 Martel, supra note 270 at 594. 275 Ibid. at 607.
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correctional staff view inmates and the way inmates consider correctional staff.
Solitary confinement allows for no sense of history, no perception that the inmate or
the guard might have been something else at another point in time, and no
exploration of causal relationships. Furthermore, guards tend only to interact with
inmates held in solitary confinement in response to bad behaviour:
…it is hard for prisoners to initiate behavior at all in these places, let alone to act and represent themselves as full human beings with true personhood and multidimensional lives and relationships that predate their stay in supermax. To be sure, there is nothing in the day-‐to-‐day limited and contorted interactions they have with guards and other staff to remind those in charge of who they really are, were, or could become. A self-‐fulfilling prophecy is created in which guards see prisoners acting in precisely the degraded terms and within the narrow dehumanized constructs that have been assigned to them, confirming their disparaging views, and justifying—even escalating—their mistreatment.276
Haney’s research suggests that both inmates and guards make a fundamental
error of attribution by deciding that the behaviour displayed in solitary confinement
is a reflection of the person rather than the incredibly stressful circumstances in
which both parties find themselves. Thus, the inmate’s aggressive behaviour is not a
result of his psychological deterioration due to unrelenting solitude, but is rather
confirmation that he is, indeed, one of the worst of the worst. The correctional
officer’s hostility and defensiveness is not a response to the hazards and
uncertainties of his work environment, but is rather a reflection of his unreasonable
and even malicious personality.277 The creation of a non-‐space, divorced from time,
makes this attribution error easy to make. It is also very dangerous, as the failure of
276 Haney, “A Culture of Harm”, supra note 262 at 976. 277 Ibid. at 975-‐976.
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inmates and staff to realize the effect that the austere environment is having upon
them only serves to confirm their worst suspicions and to heighten tension and
hostility. The failure to recognize that solitary confinement is producing at least
some of the unruly behaviour displayed by inmates allows for that behaviour to
serve as the continued justification for their segregation.278
A recurring theme within the Arbour Report is that the correctional branch
of the justice system considers compliance with the law to be optional, particularly
in a state of emergency. Arbour notes that “even if the law is known, there is a
general perception that it can always be departed from for a valid reason, and that,
in any event compliance with prisoners’ rights is not a priority.”279 In the aftermath
to the 1994 riot, the decision to allow a male emergency response team to strip
search female prisoners in segregation was based, at least in part, on a belief that, in
the context of a serious emergency, the law did not need to be followed. This belief
prevailed despite the fact that the relevant legislation specifically addresses
emergency situations.280
The isolated nature of the segregation unit within a prison creates a highly
stressful situation for inmates and guards alike. Correctional officers, themselves
victims of their work environment, have the impression that they are alone in their
assignment of dealing with the difficult inmates they guard. Not only does the
278 Ibid. at 965. 279 Arbour Report, supra note 9 at 52. 280 Ibid. at 75.
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outside world seem far away, in some respects it ceases even to exist. Solitary
confinement, known to house the worst of the worst, is a place removed from the
support of community and the familiar vestiges marking time and space. In these
challenging circumstances, it is unsurprising that a sense of emergency generally
prevails such that the governing legislation seems to hold little relevance or moral
authority for those in charge of maintaining order.
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CHAPTER FIVE IN SEARCH OF A BETTER SYSTEM
“To the future or to the past, to a time when thought is free, when men are different from one another and do not live alone- to a time when truth exists and what
is done cannot be undone: From the age of uniformity, from the age of solitude, from the age of Big
Brother, from the age of doublethink – greetings!”281
In May 2012, the harrowing tale of Californian university student Daniel
Chong made international headlines.282 Chong was investigated pursuant to a drug
raid, taken into police custody for investigation, but was ultimately told that he
would not be charged with any offence. While handcuffed in a windowless holding
cell waiting to be released, police forgot about him. The lights to his cell turned off
and remained off for several days. Though he could hear the muffled voices of those
outside his cell, his own cries for help failed to attract any attention. Detained
without food or water for five days, Chong was forced to drink his own urine to stay
alive. In a state of dehydration, starvation and despair, Chong attempted to carve
the words “Sorry Mom” into his arm before ingesting shards from his broken glasses
in a possible attempt to end his life. When discovered, Chong was close to death,
having lost 15 pounds, suffering from dehydration, kidney failure and a perforated
281 Orwell, supra note 1 at 30. (Excerpt from Winston Smith’s diary) 282 “Drug suspect forgotten in cell drank urine to survive: DEA agents forgot about California college student for 5 days” The Associated Press (2 May 2012), online: CBC News World http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/story/2012/05/02/student-‐forgotten-‐in-‐cell.html;
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esophagus. He recovered in hospital while correctional staff where left to figure out
how it was that such an error occurred.
On one hand, it is very difficult to understand how this kind of tragedy could
take place. How could someone taken into police custody be left totally
unaccounted for, to the point that he disappeared from his custodians’
consciousness for a period of five days? On the other hand, Chong’s story is very
much the natural consequence of the modern prison system and a tragic example of
what this paper addresses. We have been so successful in creating a place apart in
our prisons and, apparently, police holding cells, a place that is removed not only
from public consciousness but from the consciousness of guards themselves, that a
young man was forgotten, not just symbolically, but actually.
Chong was not the worst of the worst offenders. He was not even going to be
charged with a criminal offence. Undeniably, Chong was the victim of negligent
officers and staff, but he was also the victim of architecture, of a windowless cell and
of walls so thick that they muted his cries for help. Had he been left a day longer, it
is believed that Chong’s cell, in which he was buried alive, would have indeed
entombed his body. Chong’s ordeal will no doubt spawn a considerable lawsuit
(news sources report that Chong is seeking $20 million in damages283), but
hopefully it will also inspire discussion about how terribly wrong our system of
crime and punishment has gone. After all, Chong is not a hardened criminal who the
public may assure themselves “got what he deserved.” He was a citizen who was
283 “Daniel Chong drank own urine, wants $20-‐million” Macleans.ca (4 May, 2012), online: Macleans.ca on campus http://oncampus.macleans.ca/education/2012/05/04/student-‐forgotten-‐in-‐jail-‐cell-‐for-‐five-‐days/.
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supposed to be released free of charges. It cannot be said that he was punished as
punishment implies wrongdoing, and we have no reason to believe he was anything
except in the wrong place at the wrong time. Simply and undeniably, Chong was the
victim of a horrific oversight that resulted in terrible and nearly tragic
consequences.
The brutality of Daniel Chong’s story gives some credence to the self-‐
admittedly bold suggestions for punitive reform of Peter Moskos. In his
provocatively titled book In Defence of Flogging, Moskos recommends the lash as an
alternative to our current system of locking up offenders and throwing away the
key. Challenging those who reject flogging as an alternative to incarceration based
upon its cruelty, Moskos’s words could speak directly to Daniel Chong’s terrible
experience:
Is anything worse than being entombed alive? Edgar Allan Poe may as well have been commenting on the morality of the prison system when he wrote, ‘To be buried while alive is, beyond question, the most terrific of these extremes which has ever fallen to the lot of mere mortality.’ From this, seeing life in prison as the burial of the human soul is but a small metaphorical step. At the same time that Poe was writing, an early Sing Sing warden told inmates, “You are to be literally buried from the world.” Charles Dickens called the prison cell a ‘stone coffin’.284 Moskos, a Baltimore police officer turned criminologist, has written about
the utter failure of the American war on crime that has led to the mass incarceration
of American citizens. The United States of America has a much higher level of
284 Moskos, supra note 207 at 50.
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incarceration than we do in Canada,285 and a preference for longer sentences as
well, but Moskos’ comments about and criticism of the modern practice of
incarceration apply just as readily to the Canadian correctional system. Moskos’
work drew some much-‐needed attention to some of the absurdities of the current
practice of incarceration hereto unexplored within this paper. First, there is the
tremendous cost of incarceration, both financially and in terms of the trickle down
harm to the un-‐incarcerated. Moskos bemoans governments’ unwillingness to
spend money on citizens in an effort to prevent criminal behaviour despite their
enthusiasm for spending money on punishment. Rather than devoting resources to
skills training and job creation, governments seemingly prefer to spend money on
the 24-‐hour a day surveillance of an inmate.286 But the cost of housing, watching
and feeding the inmate population are certainly not the only costs of incarceration.
By plucking people from their lives and placing them in jail, we are preventing them
not only from doing bad things (except for those inmates who manage to do bad
things while in custody), but also from doing good things to help both themselves
and their families and communities.287 By making a person an inmate, our system
reduces their identity to a single dimension: criminal. And, sadly, that person is not
the only one who suffers. As Moskos wrote:
285 Moskos indicates at more than 1% of America is incarcerated and more than 50% of black Americans without a high school diploma will be incarcerated at some point in their lives: Moskos, supra note 207 at pp. 13 and 63. 286 Moskos, supra note 207 at 88. 287 Ibid. at 63.
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… even bad people have some attributes that help their family and community function. From behind bars a prisoner can’t take care of elderly grandparents. His girlfriend suffers. His baby’s mother suffers. Their children suffer. Because of this, in the long run, we all suffer.288
And “we” continue to suffer after the inmate is released. After all, his dissociation
from society and criminal record makes securing employment much more difficult,
if not impossible.289 Not surprisingly, considering the kinds of alliances that are
formed and anecdotes that are shared behind bars, time in prison is itself
criminogenic.290
With the backdrop of the cruel, expensive and ineffective system of
incarceration, Moskos’s work challenges the reader to consider presenting offenders
with the option of enduring the sting of the lash rather than the slow burn of time in
prison. The lash (two lashes for every year in prison, one lash for shorter sentences
and no more than 30 lashes in any case where the lash was imposed) is efficient,
“essentially free”, severe and brief:291
The person to be flogged would be inspected by a doctor, tied to a whipping post, and stripped at the butt. The flogger would enter the room, perform a few warm-‐up snaps of the cane, and then commence. After the proper number of lashes, the offender would again be examined by a doctor, have any wounds tended to, and be sent on his or her way. The punishment would be complete after only a few minutes of brutal pain.292
288 Ibid. at 64. 289 Ibid. at 65. 290 Ibid. at 62. 291 Ibid. at 140, 144. 292 Ibid. at 146.
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According to Moskos’ scheme, flogging would never be forced upon anyone, but
would rather be presented as an option to those offenders who must be punished
though are not so dangerous that they require separation from society.293 Moskos
asked those who think that his scheme means that criminals will be getting off easy
to consider their own humanity.294 For those who suggest that flogging is too cruel
to be entertained, he alluded to the violence, including sexual violence, that occurs
in prison and suggested that it is not, in fact, cruelty that they oppose, but rather
being confronted with cruelty:295
Indeed, we would be deeply deluded – if not downright duplicitous – to express horror at the violence inherent in legal judicial flogging and, by doing so, condone the much more insidious violence inherent in jail and prison. Opposition to flogging often seems to come not from a desire to protect the person being flogged but from a more selfish desire to protect the punisher.296
Moskos is not a sadist. He does not relish the idea of inflicting physical harm
to others. However, he sees in flogging a transparency and honesty so desperately
needed in the correctional system.297 To its credit, flogging does not involve sending
human beings into a black hole where few know what takes place and the rest of us
are spared the affront to our eyes. While he wishes the prison reformers well, he
believes that “tinker[ing] at the edge of a massive failed system” is simply not
293 Ibid. at 20-‐21, 144. 294 Ibid. at 113-‐114. 295 Ibid. at 57. 296 Ibid. at 147. 297 Ibid. at 90.
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enough to make a meaningful difference.298 Something as dramatic as reintroducing
the lash is necessary to shake us from our complacency and force us to consider
what our governments do to people in the name of punishment.
The scope of Moskos’s critique is broader than that of this paper. He
recommends a total revolution in the way we punish offenders, suggesting that the
pre-‐mass incarceration times, which we typically consider so barbaric were, in fact,
less barbaric than our current practice. More narrowly, this paper addresses the
practice of solitary confinement within penal institutions. The scope is smaller, but
some of Moskos’s themes are useful in considering ways to improve the current
practice of segregation.
First, we must promote greater transparency in punishment. As noted in
Chapters Three and Four, our modern prison system has removed the offender from
society in an unprecedented manner. Once punishment is hidden from public view,
the public is largely removed from any discussion of how inmates should be treated.
This alienation allows for complacency among those who prefer to remain willfully
blind about any abuses that occur behind the closed doors of the penitentiary.
Moskos expressed the “progression” towards alienating society’s least wanted most
pithily:
Institutionalization – in prisons, asylums, and public housing – has effectively created a disposable class of people to be locked away and discarded. This was not always the case. Historically, even though great efforts were made in early America to keep “outsiders” and the “undeserving” poor off public welfare rolls, society’s undesirables – the destitute, disabled, insane, and even criminals – were still considered part of the community. The proverbial
298 Ibid. at 148.
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village idiot may have been mocked, beat up, and even abused, but he was still the village’s idiot. Some combination of religious charity, public duty, and familial obligation provided (not always adequately) for society’s least wanted. Then reformers got involved. Although designed in part to benefit the public in a free and self-‐governing society, the almshouse, orphanage, public hospital, and prison all shared a similar and more nefarious purpose: to effectively manage and remove society’s least wanted.299
Moskos’s words are all the more applicable to the inmates of solitary confinement
who are not once but twice removed from society.
Secondly, Moskos challenged his readers to be bold in their
recommendations for penal reform. His recommendation of reintroducing the lash
provokes a knee-‐jerk rejection which, upon further reflection, lessens to a nagging
discomfort with the idea; the knee-‐jerk rejection was based, after all, on a naïve
understanding of how bad the current system of punishment actually is. Moskos
believes that the way we deal with offenders is sufficiently wrong-‐headed that we
should not be afraid to bring out the wrecking ball. So do I. In light of this position,
it may be surprising that this paper does not advocate for the end of solitary
confinement. There is a reason for that, although it is not a great one. I do not have
a better suggestion, a lash if you will. As long as there are prisons, it seems that
there must be a more secure place to hold inmates who are completely out of
control, or to house particular troublemakers when tensions must be reduced. The
recommendation of this paper is that, while there is need for a physical space apart
within our current prison system, the psychic distance between segregation and the
rest of the world must be diminished. While Moskos might believe that I am not
dreaming big enough, I submit that this recommendation is still a bold one,
299 Ibid. at 90.
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premised, to put it simply, on making segregation less segregated. To achieve this
goal, I recommend a multi-‐pronged approach, each prong aiming to strengthen the
connection between segregation and the outside world.
The Criminal Offence of Unlawful Confinement
Perhaps my most ambitious recommendation involves the criminal justice
system itself: correctional officers who willfully fail to respect the CCRA and the
CCRR in their confinement of an inmate should be subject to criminal prosecution
for unlawful confinement. Former inmates who were improperly held in
segregation have, on occasion, been successful in suing civilly for false
imprisonment.300 There is no case law to indicate that Canadian correctional staff
have ever been found guilty of unlawful confinement for failing to segregate inmates
in accordance with the governing legislation. This lack of precedent is not
surprising. It is somewhat counterintuitive to posit that jailers could be guilty of
unlawfully confining inmates who they are required to guard. In fact, the jailer
confining an inmate is a classic example of a situation in which the restriction of
another person’s mobility is not unlawful (this assumes, however, that the
confinement is within the bounds of the law). However, a civil remedy is simply not
sufficient to safeguard inmates’ rights. While in custody, inmates have very limited
ability to make the justice system work for them, both financially and logistically.
Once released, many former inmates continue to face financial barriers.
Furthermore, the damage is already done. Financial compensation is the best that a
300 See Saint-Jacques v. Canada (Solicitor General) (1991), 45 F.T.R. 1 (F.C.C.), and Brandon v. Correctional Service (1996), 105 F.T.R. 243 (F.C.T.D.).
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system of civil liability can do, and it is unlikely that the actual prison official who
decided to flout the rules will be the one with pockets deep enough to compensate
the inmate or former inmate.
Notably, recent jurisprudence in the area of unlawful confinement has
demonstrated two significant developments. First, two appellate level decisions
have upheld convictions of unlawful confinement against parents who, like jailers,
have traditionally been considered to possess total authority over the mobility of
their children. Secondly, the Manitoba Court of Appeal in Kematch, 2010 MBCA 18
demonstrated the incremental change of the common law by recognizing that
psychologically imposed barriers to physical mobility can be sufficient to establish
unlawful confinement. This flexibility may suggest that the courts are ready to
consider an unlawful confinement allegation against prison guards.
It is important that correctional officers feel the force of the criminal law in
order for the laws of Canadian society to permeate the walls of segregation such that
the guards who stood outside of Ashley Smith’s cell have a code of conduct to
consider beyond the orders of their superiors. Several Canadian decisions have
recognized that incarceration does not mean a total loss of liberty and that inmates
have the right to enjoy the aspects of their residual liberty unless there is sufficient
reason to take them away.301 The threat of criminal prosecution for unlawful
confinement would send the message that Canadian society cares about the fair
treatment of inmates and would serve to remind correctional staff that they share
301 See Shubley, supra note 65, at paras. 6-‐8. Also Miller, supra note 64, at para. 36 and Winters v. BC, supra note 66, at para. 63.
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humanity and vulnerability with the inmates that they guard. Civil proceedings, on
the other hand, are available only to the few who can afford them and do not carry
the same denunciatory message. I believe that the criminal prosecution of
correctional officers for the offence of unlawful confinement should be reserved for
flagrant violations of the CCRA, or relevant governing legislation, so not to capture
innocent and minor mistakes. The offence of unlawful confinement is a more
attractive option than criminal negligence causing either bodily harm or death as
unlawful confinement can be alleged before irreparable harm, at least physically
speaking, has been inflicted.
This suggestion for reform invites several critiques. First and foremost, it
would be very difficult to motivate police to lay charges against correctional officers.
Inmates’ stories are hidden from view and thus easily forgotten or brushed under
the rug by a police department reticent to impugn another branch of corrections
and law enforcement. Additionally, correctional officers have a notoriously difficult
job and many may find my suggestion draconian. However, I believe that, just as
lawyers are aware that they are vulnerable to criminal charges of contempt of court
if their behaviour departs dramatically from the established limits of professional
conduct, and police officers are aware that they may be charged with assault if they
inflict gratuitous violence,302 so too should correctional officers feel the weight of
the law in order to remind them of their subjugation to it.
302Betsy Powell, “Off-‐duty police highway assault brings Toronto officer 90 days in jail” thestar.com (21 August 2012), online: http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/crime/article/1244596-‐-‐off-‐duty-‐highway-‐assault-‐brings-‐toronto-‐officer-‐90-‐days-‐in-‐jail.
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As I have already stated, of late Canadian courts of appeal have demonstrated
a willingness to think expansively about the offence of unlawful confinement,
extending its boundaries to areas previously believed untouchable. In R. v. E.B.,303
the Ontario Court of Appeal upheld a conviction for forcible confinement and
second-‐degree murder in a case of tremendous abuse perpetrated by grandparents
against their 5-‐year-‐old grandson (who died) and their 6-‐year-‐old granddaughter
(who survived). Finding the appellants guilty of unlawful confinement, the trial
judge held that unlawful confinement does not require total physical restraint but
rather only a restriction on liberty.
The court rejected the appellant grandparents’ argument that they confined
their grandchildren to their locked, filthy and freezing bedroom as part of a
legitimate exercise of parental authority, holding that the right to control children’s
behaviour and to restrict their mobility does not permit this kind of degrading
treatment. This decision and the decision of Kematch,304 discussed below, represent
the first reported decisions in which parents have been convicted of forcibly
confining their children. The dearth of other such case law is likely based on a
perceived right on the part of parents to restrict the mobility of their children
however they see fit.
The court described the terrible abuse endured by the children, J.B.(1) and
J.B.(2), as follows:
303 R. v. E.B. (2011), 269 C.C.C. (3d) 227 (Ont. C.A.) [E.B. cited to C.C.C.]. 304 R. v. Kematch (2010), 252 C.C.C. (3d) 349 (Man. C.A.) [Kematch cited to C.C.C.].
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J.B.(1) and J.B.(2) were treated like unloved and unwanted animals. They were confined for upwards of 12 hours a day in a locked, barren and unheated room that was more like a dungeon than a bedroom. The most basic needs of J.B.(1) and J.B.(2) were ignored and they were left in utter squalor in their room. That room reeked of urine and feces. Neither child was toilet trained. Their isolation within the home is perhaps best demonstrated by the evidence of a neighbour, who was unaware that J.B.(1) and J.B.(2) even existed, although he visited the home three or four times a week in the year before J.B.(1)'s death. J.B.(1) and J.B.(2) were allowed out of their room each morning around 10:00 or 11:00 a.m. They were placed on a mat in the kitchen and required to eat the meagre food given to them from a bowl placed on the floor. J.B.(1) was never allowed to go to school. He was made to remain on the mat while out of his room. J.B.(2) attended school part-‐time. Her teachers noticed that she was filthy, her clothes were dirty and her hair was lice infested. She was always hungry.305
J.B.(1) and J.B.(2) were locked in their bedroom for more than 12 hours a day.306
While the appellants acknowledged that the decision to so confine their
grandchildren amounted to “bad parenting”, they argued through their counsel
(neither grandparent testified at trial) that they were not acting unlawfully, but
rather within the ambit of their parental authority. In particular, they mentioned a
concern that the children would drink out of the toilet bowl if they were not so
confined. The court described this argument as “patently preposterous”.307 The
grandparents had no lawful authority to treat their helpless grandchildren in such a
way, neither under s. 43 of the Criminal Code,308 which addresses the physical
305 E.B., supra note 303 at paras. 18-‐19. 306 Ibid. at para. 98. 307 Ibid. at para. 100. 308 Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-‐46.
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discipline of minors, nor any other statutory or common law authority.309 Both
children were unlawfully confined to their bedrooms by their grandparents who
had vastly exceeded their authority as guardians.
In R. v. Kematch, the Manitoba Court of Appeal upheld a conviction for first-‐
degree murder of a five-‐year-‐old girl, Phoenix, who was beaten to death by her
parents during the course of a forcible confinement executed in her family home.
While the young girl was not kept in her family’s basement under lock and key, she
was detained in the basement by the very real threat of abuse that awaited her if she
left the basement and came upstairs. For the first time in Kematch, an appellate
court recognized that unlawful confinement could be affected by imposing a
psychological barrier preventing movement as opposed to a purely physical
restraint.310
On appeal, both parent appellants argued that their convictions for first-‐
degree murder could not stand as the murder convictions had been elevated to first-‐
degree as a result of the unlawful confinement of the deceased,311 and the deceased
had not been unlawfully confined. Like the grandparents in E.B., the parents argued
that keeping Phoenix in the basement of the family home for extended periods of
time was a matter of parenting strategy. The court rejected this position, and
quoted the trial decision of Justice Watt in E.B. in so doing:
309 E.B., supra note 303 at paras. 101 and 103. 310 Kematch, supra note 304 at para. 89. 311 Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-‐46, at s. 231(5).
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I reject any notion that the treatment of Phoenix can be considered in the context of a parent-‐child relationship or that this is a case of child discipline being properly and lawfully administered supposedly by care givers. A complete answer to McKay’s allegation of error is again to be found in E.B. where Watt J. deals with the use of force for corrective purposes (at para. 121):
To illustrate a claim of lawful authority, consider the justification contained in section 43 of the Criminal Code, which is in these terms:
43. Every schoolteacher, parent or person standing in the place of a parent is justified in using force by way of correction towards a pupil or child, as the case may be, who is under his care, if the force does not exceed what is reasonable under the circumstances.
The provision justifies the use of force for corrective purposes only. And the nature and extent of the force used must not exceed what is reasonable under the circumstances. Section 43 does not permit or justify degrading, inhuman or harmful conduct. See, Canadian Foundation for Children, Youth and the Law v. Canada (A.G.), [2004 SCC 4], [2004] 1 S.C.R. 76, 180 C.C.C. (3d) 353. The force used must be corrective, not preventative. The justification also appears directed at what might be determined “situational” correction, not a long-‐term and invariable or routine practice.312
In his instruction to the jury, the trial judge in Kematch distinguished lawful
confinement from unlawful confinement, stating that: “In our society, the law
authorizes certain people to confine others. A jailer, for example, may confine a
person to a prison in accordance with the terms of a lawful court, order of a
court”.313 The use of the jailer as an example of a person who lawfully confines
another is noteworthy in the context of this paper. As with parents, however, there
are limits to the authority of the jailer’s authority to confine an inmate. The
Canadian courts have recognized that time in solitary confinement is fundamentally
different from time that is spent in the prison’s general population in that is far
312 Kematch, supra note 304 at para. 102. 313 Ibid. at para. 101.
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more restrictive. When solitary confinement is imposed in a way that does not
honour the requirements of the governing legislation, it is confinement without
lawful authority. The courts should be willing and able to see past the fact that it is a
prison guard, or another correctional authority figure, who is doing the unlawful
confining, just as the appellate courts of Ontario and Manitoba have shown an ability
to identify unlawful confinement perpetrated by parents and those standing in the
place of parents, another class of persons who, traditionally, have been considered
to exercise total control over their charges.
In “The Year in Review: Developments in Canadian Law in 2009-‐2010”,
authors Matthew Law and Jeremy Opolsky selected Kematch as a noteworthy
decision that changed the definition of unlawful confinement and the types of fact-‐
patterns which may give rise to the charge.314 While Law and Opolsky comment
that the particular vulnerability of the victim may affect its future applicability, they
suggest the possibility for a far-‐reaching effect. I believe that the Kematch decision,
as well as the court’s decision in E.B., illustrates the flexibility of the common law, an
appreciation for the psychological state of victims of confinement, and an awareness
of a distinction between permissible and impermissible subjugation on the part of
authority figures which may inspire confidence that prison guards could be found
guilty of unlawful confinement when they imprison inmates in a matter that exceeds
their legislative entitlements.
314 Matthew Law & Jeremy Opolsky, “The Year in Review: Developments in Canadian Law in 2009-‐2010” (2010) 68:2 U.T. Fac. L. Rev. 99.
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Independent Adjudication and Sentence Reduction for Inappropriate and Extended Administrative Segregation Michael Jackson and Louise Arbour have both made recommendations for
improving the practice of solitary confinement the implementation of which I
consider essential to the quest of establishing solitary confinement as a space within
a broader community. As referenced in earlier chapters, Jackson insists on
independent adjudication for determinations of administrative segregation as well
as punitive segregation (contrary to the current practice whereby independent
adjudicators outside of the prison system only determine punitive placements in
segregation). Louise Arbour insists that inmates who are improperly held in
segregation be able to apply to the courts for a reduction in their sentence. I will
address the Arbour’s recommendation first as it is particularly timely in light of the
Harper government’s Truth in Sentencing act, also known as Bill C-‐25, which came
into effect on February 22, 2010.315
Bill C-‐25 changed the previously standard practice of awarding 2:1 credit for
time spent in pre-‐sentence custody. In particularly difficult custodial conditions,
such as the triple bunking at the Don Jail, courts sometimes awarded 3:1 credit for
jail time spent pre-‐sentence. Prior to Bill C-‐25, courts gave 2:1 credit for pre-‐
sentence custody in order to recognize the particular hardships (remember Mr.
Bacon from Chapter Two?) associated with being detained as a presumptively
innocent person awaiting trial: the lack of programming typical of pre-‐trial
detention centres and the lack of earned remission. It is unusual for Canadian
315 Truth in Sentencing Act, S.C. 2009, c. 29.
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inmates to serve the entirety of their sentences; they are eligible for release after
one-‐third or two-‐thirds of their sentences, depending on whether they are inmates
of the federal or provincial systems. In part, 2:1 credit was given for time spent in
pre-‐sentence custody to recognize the fact that time spent pre-‐sentence does not
count toward the one-‐third or two-‐third calculation. The lack of earned remission
and educational, retraining, and rehabilitative programming available in pre-‐
sentence custody has led inmates and criminal law practitioners to refer to pre-‐
sentence custody as “dead time”.316 The name is particularly apt in those
circumstances in which the inmate is ultimately acquitted; in those cases, the time
served, often a period of several months, counts toward nothing, is in no way
compensated, and represents time outside of the person’s life. Often the relief of an
acquittal distracts from the injustice inherent in months of punishment endured by
someone who is ultimately found not guilty.
The name of Harper’s legislation, “Truth in Sentencing”, suggests that the
conservative government was not persuaded by the reasons given for awarding
enhanced credit for pre-‐sentence custody. It implies, and not so subtly, that prior to
the Act, there was a lack of truth in sentencing. Under the new regime, 1:1 credit is
the new norm for pre-‐sentence credit, which may be extended to 1:1.5 credit if the
circumstances justify it.317 Two-‐for-‐one credit is off the table. Furthermore, if an
accused is detained pre-‐trial based on his criminal record or due to the alleged
commission of a breach of a bail condition or a new offence, 1.5:1 credit if off the
316 R. v. Rezaie (1996), 112 C.C.C. (3d) 97 (Ont. C.A.), at para. 25. 317 Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-‐46, s. 719(3.1).
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table as well. In those cases, 1:1 credit is the new maximum. By creating these
ceilings of credit, the conservative government responded to complaints that some
detained accused were manipulating the system by delaying their pleas of guilt until
they were in a “time served” position based the expected receipt of 2:1 credit. In
short, the government reacted to complaints that a sixteen-‐month sentence became
an eight-‐month sentence, at least according to the calendar.
If we are going to have “truth in sentencing” of the kind established by the
Harper government, it seems only fair that we extend that “truth” to the time spent
by inmates following their convictions. It seems only appropriate and balanced that
we acknowledge the obvious truth that time spent in solitary confinement and
segregation, where there is a total lack of stimulation, distraction, or comfort of any
kind, lasts longer than time spent in the general population. Often, inmates are
placed within solitary confinement or segregation not because of something that
they did, but to assist in the smooth functioning of the institution. If this is the case,
and an inmate is required to endure harder time through no fault of his own, should
he not be compensated by way of a reduced sentence?
Admittedly, the conservative government’s changes to the sentencing regime
which took place despite the particular hardships of time spent in pre-‐sentence
custody does not bode well for any acknowledgement, by way of sentence reduction,
of the additional burden of solitary confinement. However, the government’s use of
the word “truth” evokes my response that truth of the kind advocated by Louise
Arbour is just what we need. If we, as a community, based on what I assume to have
been the government’s motivation for Bill C-‐25, have expressed that we are not
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going to suffer the manipulation of inmates who strategically exploit the courts’
compassion, surely we must offer truth in sentencing to those inmates who are
exploited by virtue of their powerlessness. To suggest otherwise betrays a
collective impression that, post-‐sentencing, inmates cease to matter.
Importantly, allowing inmates to appeal to the court for the remedy of
sentence reduction when segregated improperly would strengthen the bond
between the segregated inmate and the rest of the world. It would mean that the
courts would retain stronger oversight over the convicted inmate and that, in
appropriate circumstances, the inmate could initiate a dialogue with the court. Such
a system would also call attention to routine abuses of inmate rights and motivate
prisons and penitentiaries to abide by the governing legislation lest frequent
litigation tarnish their reputations. Again, there is an absurdity inherent in the fact
that abusive state conduct may result in the exclusion of the only incriminating
evidence against an accused, and thereby bring a prosecution to a halt, while no
timely and meaningful remedy is available for inmates who suffer abuses at the
hands of prison officials.318
Michael Jackson’s recommendation of independent adjudication for both
administrative segregation hearings as well as punitive segregation hearings is also
essential for connecting isolated inmates to the outside world, as well as inserting
some truth into sentencing. After all, unlike punitive segregation, there is no
maximum placed on the time that inmates may be required to spend in
administrative segregation. As such, the procedural safeguards in place for 318 Arbour Report, supra note 9, at pp. 183-‐184.
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disciplinary hearings for serious disciplinary offences are all the more needed for
administrative segregation hearings where an inmate’s jeopardy is potentially
greater. Again, remember that Mr. Bacon, whose habeus corpus application was
described in Chapter Two, was segregated for seven months while waiting for his
trial. The necessity of independent adjudication does not mean, and should not be
taken to mean, that Corrections Canada cannot do its job. It is simply recognition of
the difficulty that anyone would have in dispassionately assessing matters rooted so
close to home. It would help to prevent inmates from being forgotten, and it would
help to protect inmates who are difficult or unpopular with the staff from being
relegated to the shadowy edges of prison life. It would also serve to protect
correctional staff who, no doubt, feel pressure to make decisions that will be
popular amongst their colleagues and may be more inclined to segregate demanding
inmates as a result.319 Allowing for independent adjudication in all matters
involving or potentially involving segregation would provide a much-‐needed
conduit between segregation or solitary confinement and the rest of the world.
Contextualize Segregation
My final recommendation for improving the current system of segregation is
that guards be provided with the personal histories of segregated inmates. The
terrible history of Ashley Smith reveals that guards are not always provided with
this information. The Union of Canadian Correctional Officers complained that the
guards within the federal correctional system who were responsible for Ashley’s 319 Jackson, Justice Behind the Walls, supra note 216 at 410-‐411.
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supervision felt frustrated by the lack of information they were provided about
Ashley’s history.320 Without any historical information about her, without, for
example, any information about her loving adoptive family or the fact that the
offence that landed her in prison was throwing crab apples at a postal worker,
Ashley was nothing beyond her terrible behaviour while in custody. Stripped of the
details of their lives and their humanizing qualities, inmates become nothing more
than their worst behaviour in their worst moments. Without a sense of history,
absent the details as to why an inmate has found himself little more than a caged
animal, he is too easily “other”-‐ized. As Stanley Milgram’s obedience study revealed,
people have an easier time inflicting pain as the physical distance between them and
the victim increases. It seems that the distance need not be physical. It is easier to
ignore the pain of the inmate who one may dismiss as a monster for lack of
humanizing information. However, just as abuse begets abuse, compassion,
patience and understanding propagate the like. Inmates treated with respect would
have an easier time imagining a prison guard as a father, husband and brother, and
as someone who has a difficult job to do.
Each of my chapters has been prefaced by an excerpt from Nineteen Eighty-
Four, one of English literature’s most celebrated dystopias. Within my prison
utopia, prison guards would be expected to sit on a committee seeking to improve
conditions within segregation. They would be encouraged to criticize current
practices that they believe need fixing. Such a practice would help to normalize
dissent within the correctional community and would help to destabilize attitudes
320 A Rush to Judgment, supra note 45 at 7.
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that segregation and solitary confinement must operate in a certain way. Perhaps I
am dreaming too boldly, but there simply must be a better way to manage
segregation and solitary confinement than our current way of doing business. An
historical review of how solitary confinement came to exist in our modern prisons
and penitentiaries, an honest evaluation of the terrible harm that it causes, and a fair
assessment of the perversities of the practice demand that we do better. The first
step may be to open a window.
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WORKS CITED
LEGISLATION
Correction Act, SBC 2004. Corrections and Conditional Release Act, S.C. 1992, c. 20. Corrections and Conditional Release Regulations, SOR/92-‐620. Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-‐46. Truth in Sentencing Act, S.C. 2009, c. 29.
JURISPRUDENCE
Bacon v. Surrey Pretrial Services Centre, 2010 BCSC 805. Brandon v. Correctional Service (1996), 105 F.T.R. 243 (F.C.T.D.). Centre for Addiction and Mental Health v. Ontario, 2012 ONCA 342. McCann v. Canada, [1976] 1 F.C. 570 (F.C.T.D.). R. v. Barton, [2002] O.J. No. 4105 (C.A.). R. v. Boland, [1994] O.J. No. 4246 (C.J.). R. v. Bruce (1977), 36 C.C.C. (2d) 158 (B.C.S.C.). R. v. C.W.K., [2005] O.J. No. 3230 (C.J.). R. v. Desjarlais, [2008] A.J. No. 721 (S.C.J.). R. v. E.B. (2011), 269 C.C.C. (3d) 227 (Ont. C.A.). R. v. Hanner, [2002] B.C.J. No. 1964 (Prov. Ct.). R. v. J.S., [1998] S.J. No. 247 (Prov. Ct.). R. v. Kematch (2010), 252 C.C.C. (3d) 349 (Man. C.A.).
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R. v. Kerschner, [2006] O.J. No. 4014 (C.J.). R. v. Miller (1985), 23 C.C.C. (3d) 97 (S.C.C.). R. v. Mullins, [1994] O.J. No. 972 (C.J.). R. v. Nguyen, [1999] O.J. No. 4730 (S.C.J.). R. v. Rezaie (1996), 112 C.C.C. (3d) 97 (Ont. C.A.). R. v. Robinson, [1997] O.J. No. 5973 (C.J.). R. v. Shubley, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 3. Saint-Jacques v. Canada (Solicitor General) (1991), 45 F.T.R. 1 (F.C.C.). Winters v. British Columbia (Legal Services Society) (1999), 137 C.C.C. (3d) 371 (S.C.C.).
GOVERNMENT DOCUMENTS
Canada, A Preventable Death by Howard Sapers, Correctional Investigator of Canada (Canada: Office of the Correctional Investigator, 2008), online: http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/2009-‐2010/out_of_control/links.html. New Brunswick, Ashley Smith: A Report of the New Brunswick Ombudsman and Youth Child Advocate on the services provided to a youth involved in the youth criminal justice system (Fredericton: Office of the Ombudsman & Child and Youth Advocate, 2008), online http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/2009-‐2010/out_of_control/links.html. Public Works and Government Services Canada, Commission of Inquiry into certain events at the Prison for Women in Kingston by the Honourable Louise Arbour (Ottawa: Canada Communication Group Publishing).
BOOKS
Ignatieff, Michael. A Just Measure of Pain: The Penitentiary in the Industrial Revolution 1750-‐1850 (New York: Pantheon Books, 1978). Christopher Harding et al., Imprisonment in England and Wales: A Concise History (London: Croom Helm, 1985).
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Jackson, Michael. Justice Behind the Walls: Human Rights in Canadian Prisons (Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 2002). ———. Prisoners of Isolation: Solitary Confinement in Canada (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1983). McConville, Seán. A History of English Prison Administration: 1750-1877, vol. 1 (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981). Moskos, Peter. In Defense of Flogging (New York: Basic Books, 2011).
ARTICLES (SCHOLARLY) Dubber, Markus Dirk. “The Right to be Punished: Autonomy and Its Demise in Modern Penal Thought” (Spring, 1998) 16:1 Law & History Rev. 113. Grassian, Stuart. “Psychiatric Effects of Solitary Confinement” (2006) 22 Wash. U. J.L. & Pol’y 325. Guenther, Lisa. “The Living Death of Solitary Confinement” The New York Times (26 August 2012), online: http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/08/26/the-‐living-‐death-‐of-‐solitary-‐confinement/?hp. Haney, Craig. “A Culture of Harm: Taming the Dynamics of Cruelty in Supermax Prisons” (August 2008) 35:8 Criminal Justice and Behaviour 956. ———.“Mental Health Issues in Long-‐Term Solitary and ‘Supermax’ Confinement” (January 2003) 49:1 Crime & Delinquency 124. Korn, Richard. “Liberating the Future from the Past? Liberating the Past from the Future?” (1998), cited in Jackson, Michael. Justice Behind the Walls: Human Rights in Canadian Prisons (Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 2002). Law, Matthew & Jeremy Opolsky. “The Year in Review: Developments in Canadian Law in 2009-‐2010” (2010) 68:2 U.T. Fac. L. Rev. 99. Martel, Joane. “To Be, One Has to Be Somewhere: Spatio-‐temporality in Prison Segregation” Brit J. Criminol. (2006) 46.
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ARTICLES (NEWS)
Dalton, Melinda. “Charges dropped against jail-‐death guards” (8 December 2008), online: thespec.com http://www.thespec.com/print/article/115094. “Daniel Chong drank own urine, wants $20-‐million” Macleans.ca (4 May, 2012), online: Macleans.ca on campus http://oncampus.macleans.ca/education/2012/05/04/student-‐forgotten-‐in-‐jail-‐cell-‐for-‐five-‐days/. “Drug suspect forgotten in cell drank urine to survive: DEA agents forgot about California college student for 5 days” The Associated Press (2 May 2012), online: CBC News World http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/story/2012/05/02/student-‐forgotten-‐in-‐cell.html. Makin, Kirk. “Series of calamities besets coroner’s inquest into Ashley Smith’s death,” The Globe and Mail (29 February 2012), online: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/series-‐of-‐calamities-‐besets-‐coroners-‐inquest-‐into-‐ashley-‐smiths-‐death/article550419/. Powell, Betsy. “Off-‐duty police highway assault brings Toronto officer 90 days in jail” thestar.com (21 August 2012), online: http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/crime/article/1244596-‐-‐off-‐duty-‐highway-‐assault-‐brings-‐toronto-‐officer-‐90-‐days-‐in-‐jail. Seglins, Dave. “Ashley Smith family settles $11M suit: New Brunswick teen died in Ontario prison cell” (4 May 2011), online: CBCnews Canada http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2011/05/03/ashley-‐smith-‐family-‐settles-‐suit.html.
DOCUMENTARIES
Behind the Wall” (12 November 2010), online: the fifth estate http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/2010-‐2011/behindthewall/. “Out of Control” The Fifth Estate (8 January 2010), online cbc.ca http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/discussion/2010/01/out_of_control.html; “Behind the Wall” The Fifth Estate (12 November 2010), online cbc.ca http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/2010-‐2011/behindthewall/.
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OTHER MATERIAL Carroll, Lewis. The Annotated Alice: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland & Through the Looking Glass, introduction and notes by Martin Gardner (New York: Clarkson N. Potter, Inc., 1960). Coralee Smith et al. v. Attorney General of Canada, Statement of Claim (July 14, 2009). Orwell, George. Nineteen Eighty-Four (London: Penguin Books, 2008). Union of Canadian Correctional Officers, A rush to judgment: A report on the death in custody of Ashley Smith, an inmate at Grand Valley Institution for Women (2008), online: http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/2009-‐2010/out_of_control/links.html William Butler Yeats: Selected Poems and Four Plays, 4th ed. By M.L. Rosenthal (New York: Scribner, 1996), at 89.